

General
 Buhari stated yesterday in an interview with Weekly Trust that if 
elected as president in next year’s presidential election, he would 
abolish the office of the First Lady. The office, though not 
constitutionally recognized, has been maintained by past and present 
administrations and is even seen as being key in policy decisions. He 
said that ministries, which are constitutional, should be allowed to 
play their roles instead. 
"There is the Ministry of Women Affairs, and so on. I was raised by my mother, as I lost my father when I was under 6 yars, so I know what a woman can do if given the chance”.
In a subtle way of replying Buhari's comments, First Lady Dame Patience Jonathan, emphasized the importance of the office of 
the First Lady in the Nigerian politics, saying that the office has been
 an avenue for mobilizing women for mass participation in politics. 
She
 said this in Abia state during a reception organized for her by the 
Ohuhu community, her maternal home in Umuahia North Local Government 
Area of Abia state, yesterday.  
She said the bid by politicians from the opposition camp to scrap the office of the First Lady would amount to sending the Nigerian women back to the kitchen if such came to fruition, adding,
She said the bid by politicians from the opposition camp to scrap the office of the First Lady would amount to sending the Nigerian women back to the kitchen if such came to fruition, adding,
“It is not our portion to go back to the kitchen. We have women that are capable. We can contribute our quota to the development of Nigeria".
She also told the 
women not to vote for any politician who doesn't respect women.
The
 First Lady had veered off from the address she was reading at the 
occasion when she directed the attention of guests to Buhari’s idea 
which she said was not practicable in the ongoing political dispensation
 because of the critical role women have been playing in politics.
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