The office of the First Lady said last
night that Mrs. Jonathan’s foreign trip was “to take time off to rest” and not
for medical purposes as speculated.
First Lady’s spokesman Ayo Osinlu confirmed that Mrs. Jonathan
has travelled abroad since last week but that she was only away to take a
“moment’s rest” given that she has not taken a rest since President Jonathan’s
election last year.
Osinlu told Daily Trust by telephone that after the African
First Ladies Summit which she hosted late July, Mrs. Jonathan decided she
should take some time off to rest.
“If you look at her itinerary in August, you will be wondering
how she was able to accomplish that,” Osinlu said.
Asked when the First Lady is expected to return to Nigeria,
Osinlu said, “In the course of this week she will be back home. But remember,
it all depends on her plans.”
He added that she may decide to extend her stay abroad.
However
Daily Trust gathered that Mrs. Jonathan
left Abuja a week ago to a German hospital to treat an undisclosed condition.
The First Lady, whose local and foreign trips normally enjoy
wide coverage in state-run media, travelled out on Monday with no official
announcement of where she was headed.
But her absence at public events has been conspicuous.
During the past week, Mrs. Jonathan, 55, has not been seen at
any public function.
She has not accompanied President Jonathan on his trip to Addis
Ababa for the funeral yesterday of the late Ethiopian Prime Minister Meles
Zenawi.
Mrs. Jonathan was not with her husband in Anambra State on
Thursday where he launched the Orient Petroleum facility.
Also, she did not join the president on his two-day trip to
Senegal on August 22. The last foreign trip the First Lady embarked on with the
President was to Trinidad and Tobago at the beginning of last month, few days
after she hosted the African First Ladies Summit in Abuja.
A source told Daily Trust at the weekend that Mrs. Jonathan has
gone to a hospital called Horst Schmidt Klinik in Wiesbaden, Germany, but did
not say what condition she went there to treat.
Horst Schmidt Klinik is where the late President Yar’Adua was
once hospitalised for kidney-related ailments.
The Dr.
Horst Schmidt Hospital Corporation is the Municipal Hospital of the city of
Wiesbaden, according to its website. It serves as a teaching hospital for the
University Medical Center.
“With 21 clinics, four institutes and 1027 beds we offer our
patients a very sophisticated and high-quality treatment range for the
necessary care in our region,” information on the website said.
The hospital says it has more than 3000 workers.

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