How I Cooked Up Villa Rat Invasion Story to Divert Attention from Buhari’s Health Status- Garba Shehu Reveals

The New Diplomat
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By Nwosa Hamilton 

In a trending revelation, Garba Shehu, former Senior Special Assistant on Media and Publicity to the immediate past President of Nigeria, Muhammadu Buhari, has revealed details about a 2017 story of a rat invasion at the Presidential Villa.

Garba Shehu disclosed that the rat invasion story was a fabricated cover-up to mask former President Buhari’s prolonged illness.

This disclosure was detailed in Shehu’s newly launched book, “According to the President: Lessons from a Presidential Spokesperson’s Experience.”

Shehu’s admission centers on a peculiar narrative that emerged in August 2017, following Buhari’s return to Nigeria after nearly three months of medical treatment in the United Kingdom.

At the time, reports had emerged that the Presidential Villa had been overrun by rats, rendering Buhari’s office unusable and forcing him to work from home.

In his book, launched on July 9, 2025, at the Shehu Musa Yar’Adua Centre in Abuja, Shehu reveals that the tale was a deliberate ploy to divert public attention from Buhari’s health status at the time.

In Chapter 10 of the book, titled “Rats, Spin and All That,” Shehu narrated: “So in the few hours of the president’s return, I picked up a conversation in the office of the CoS, where the chief, a few principal officers, and the permanent secretary sat over lunch, a damage to a cable was noticed and it needed fixing.

“Someone speculated that rats may have caused that damage, given that the office was unused for a long time.

“When the surge in calls for explanation of why the president would be working from home, if truly he had recovered his health and fit for the office came, I said to the reporters that the office, which had been in disuse, needed renovation because rats may have eaten and damaged some cables.”

Rhe former presidential Spokesperson recalled vividly how the narrative about rodents invading Nigeria’s Presidential Villa and damaging furniture and the air conditioning system went viral, even coming tops among top five news items on the BBC World News bulletin.

The ex-presidential spokesperson in the book continued: “With reporters wanting to know more, the number of calls increased, with some, including the BBC Hausa, interrogating me on the type of rats we had in the Villa that could eat wire cables.

“To get them (journalists) off my back, I referred them to the strange rats that invaded the country in the 1980s during the rice armada that came here aboard ships bringing the commodity from Southeast Asia.

“As was known of them, in their destructiveness, those rats ate just anything anyone could imagine. Many critics disagreed with me, saying that we were covering up the president’s ill health. Some people had a good laugh over the narrative, and an insignificant few believed me.

“At a later meeting, the Minister of Information, Alhaji Lai Mohammed, and Vice President Prof Yemi Osinbajo asked me why I had toed that line of story.

“I said to them that the choice I made was deliberate: I wanted the discussion to shift, to move to any other issue besides the president’s health and his ability to continue in office as the leader of the country. In my view, that spin succeeded. Both of them disagreed, saying that this was well off the mark.”

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