They told Tinubu I planned to kill him and become president after our inauguration — Shettima

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By Johnbosco Agbakwuru

Vice‑President Kashim Shettima said yesterday that some individuals tried to create tension between him and President Bola Tinubu three months after their inauguration. The attempt involved urging the president to stop wearing traditional attire that Shettima had given him during the 2023 campaign.

Speaking in Abuja at the public presentation of former military head of state Yakubu Gowon’s autobiography, Shettima explained that those behind the plot claimed the garments contained charms intended to kill the president.

“When we were campaigning for him to emerge as the APC candidate, we were touring the north. I obtained materials and caps for him to blend with the northern crowd. They suited him well, and his aides said, ‘produce more, it fits him,’” Shettima said.

“Barely three months after we were sworn in, some of my people from Borno approached him and said, ‘stop wearing those Shettima clothings. He must have charmed them. And you’re going to die. And he will become the president.’”

“When I returned from China, where I represented him, he said, ‘sit down. Your people came to me and said I should stop wearing those garments you gave me.’”

“But he said their story did not add up because when you gave those garments, I was an aspirant.”

“For a week, to prove to them that he is not a fetish, he wore those garments. These are some of the gimmicks that are taking place in power circles in Nigeria nowadays.”

Shettima noted that there was no trust issue when Gowon was the military ruler, adding that the family of the Sultan of Sokoto at the time used to send “gallons of fura” weekly to Dodan Barracks in Lagos, and the head of state was always willing to receive the gift without suspicion.

“Here was a Christian son of the north, a child of the north‑central, a soldier accepted across lines that others try to harden into walls in Nigeria,” Shettima said of Gowon.

“His life proved that identity can be carried without hostility. History teaches us that the Nigerian project becomes stronger whenever citizens refuse to become weapons in the hands of sectarianism and division.”

Speaking further about the policies and achievements of the former head of state, the vice‑president said Gowon’s place in history also extends beyond Nigeria’s borders.

“As one of the builders of regional cooperation in Africa, the formation of the Economic Community of West African States remains one of the great acts of political foresight on the continent,” he said.

“It was born out of the understanding that neighbouring nations must do more than exchange flags at ceremonies. They must pursue ideas of security cooperation, diplomatic confidence, and economic opportunity.”

“In that vision, General Gowon saw Africa as a community of shared burdens and shared possibilities. That vision remains even more urgent today. The challenges confronting West Africa may have changed in form, but their underlying demands remain familiar. We need cooperation against insecurity.”

“We need faith that empowers young people. We need diplomacy that prevents conflict from becoming a contagion. We need a region where borders do not become barriers to prosperity.”

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