Buhari’s Death Exposes Dark Secrets Of Nigeria’s Healthcare Failures – #3 Will Outrage You?
When the news broke that former Nigerian President Muhammadu Buhari died in The London Clinic—a private UK hospital known for its VIP clientele and eye-watering daily costs—many Nigerians were not shocked. Saddened, yes. But surprised? Hardly.
Buhari, who repeatedly pledged to end medical tourism and improve Nigeria’s healthcare system, ironically spent much of his presidency flying abroad for treatment. Now, in death, he has become a tragic symbol of a deeper national wound: the collapse of public trust in Nigeria’s healthcare institutions.
This is not just a story about where a president died. It’s a lens into the contradictions, negligence, and elite hypocrisy that continue to plague Nigeria’s health sector.
The London Clinic: Comfort, Class, and a Price Tag in Pounds
Nestled in London’s prestigious Harley Street medical district, The London Clinic is a sanctuary for the world’s elite. Founded in 1932, the hospital offers world-class services ranging from robotic surgery to cancer treatment, with a focus on privacy, luxury, and medical precision.
A standard room there can cost up to £1,800 a night, while intensive care beds run as high as £3,500 per day—more than many Nigerians earn in a year. This is where Buhari spent his final hours, reportedly suffering breathing complications before passing away on Sunday, July 13, 2025.
His nephew, Mamman Daura, claimed the former president was “in high spirits” the night before and was preparing for discharge. But by Sunday afternoon, he was gone.
Medical Tourism, Presidential Promises, and Bitter Irony
During his presidency, Buhari vowed to curb medical tourism—a practice where Nigerians, especially the political elite, travel abroad for treatment. In 2021, he approved ₦21 billion for a “VIP Wing” at the State House Clinic, promising that top-level government officials would no longer need to seek care overseas.
Yet, in a classic case of do as I say, not as I do, Buhari reportedly spent over 225 days outside Nigeria on medical trips during his eight-year rule. His stays were long, expensive, and frequent. In 2017 alone, he spent 154 days abroad for medical reasons.
Now, in the same UK hospital where former Head of State Abdulsalami Abubakar was also admitted (and later discharged), Buhari took his final breath. The contrast is painful, if not poetic.
The Hidden Cost: Nigeria’s Billions Spent Abroad
Between 2007 and 2022, successive Nigerian administrations reportedly spent at least ₦13.4 billion on foreign medical trips for presidents and top officials. These are funds that could have built or upgraded hundreds of hospitals, equipped labs, and trained doctors—right here in Nigeria.
While the Remuneration of Former Presidents Act allows government coverage for a former president’s medical bills at home or abroad, critics argue that it shouldn’t have to come to this. Especially when the very healthcare institutions Nigerian leaders avoid are staffed by doctors and nurses trained in the same UK or Indian systems they so admire.
Healthcare Experts React: “Why Build a Hospital You Won’t Use?”
Top voices in Nigeria’s medical field are not staying quiet. Dr. Tope Osundara of the Nigerian Association of Resident Doctors (NARD) called the president’s death in a foreign clinic “a slap in the face” to Nigerian healthcare workers.
“If you tell citizens to trust Nigerian hospitals but fly abroad for your own treatment, what message are you sending?” he asked.
Prof. Bala Audu, President of the Nigerian Medical Association (NMA), echoed that sentiment. “If Buhari would have died in a Nigerian hospital—as his former spokesperson implied—then what are we funding?” he questioned, calling Adesina’s statement offensive and demoralising.
Even more telling is the success story of Vice President Yemi Osinbajo, who underwent surgery in a Nigerian hospital and recovered just fine. This shows that the issue is not about the competence of Nigerian doctors—but the infrastructure and political will behind the system.
Death in London, Consequences at Home
Buhari’s passing has reignited an old debate with renewed urgency: Can Nigeria afford to keep outsourcing its healthcare needs while its citizens suffer in underfunded hospitals?
The reality is stark. Nigerian doctors are leaving the country in droves, brain drain is accelerating, and those left behind are forced to work under conditions unfit for saving lives. Meanwhile, the very leaders responsible for fixing the system escape the consequences by boarding first-class flights to private foreign clinics.
Conclusion: Buhari’s Legacy, Nigeria’s Healthcare Dilemma
Muhammadu Buhari’s death in one of the most expensive hospitals in the UK underscores a tragic irony: a president who promised to fix healthcare died in a foreign hospital, funded by the very system he left underdeveloped.
This moment should serve as more than a national obituary. It should be a wake-up call.
Nigeria must move from rhetoric to reform. Until our leaders trust our hospitals enough to use them—even in times of crisis—ordinary Nigerians will remain trapped in a healthcare system that fails them at every turn.
In the end, it’s not just Buhari’s death that should concern us. It’s the system that made that death possible, despite all the money, all the promises, and all the years.