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When Hypocrites Collide: The Abati-Wike Circus Distracts From Real Issues -By Jeff Okoroafor

Abati and Wike are symptoms of a broken system—one where elites fight for relevance while the people suffer. Nigerians mustn’t cheer their circus. We’ve endured enough from men who switch principles for power. The solution isn’t picking a side in their fight. It’s building a Nigeria where such men are irrelevant.

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Reuben Abati and Wike

Nigeria’s political class has perfected the art of manufacturing drama to distract from their failures. The ongoing spectacle between Reuben Abati, the once-critical columnist turned government apologist, and Nyesom Wike, the bulldozer-in-chief of Abuja’s demolitions, is a masterclass in this deception. Their war of words isn’t about principles—it’s a clash of bruised egos between two men whose records betray the people they claim to serve.

The spark came when Abati criticized Wike’s ruthless demolition campaign in Abuja, which has rendered thousands homeless with no alternative shelter. Wike’s response was typical: personal attacks, dismissing Abati as a “rented commentator” while conveniently ignoring his own history of political rent-seeking.

Abati fired back, calling Wike a “reckless bully”—a valid critique, but one that rings hollow coming from a man who spent years defending the indefensible under Goodluck Jonathan. This isn’t accountability; it’s two compromised men trading insults while the country crumbles.

Reuben Abati’s journey from respected journalist to presidential spin doctor is a case study in failed moral leadership. He didn’t just defend the Jonathan administration—he weaponized rhetoric to shield corruption, including the $2.1 billion arms scandal that starved soldiers of equipment while Boko Haram advanced. Now, as a media personality, his critiques lack consistency, oscillating between genuine analysis and performative outrage.

Nyesom Wike’s brand of politics is even more toxic. As Rivers governor, he ruled through intimidation, using thugs and state machinery to crush dissent. His defection to the APC—while clinging to PDP affiliations—exposed his ideology: power for power’s sake. Now, as FCT Minister, he’s replicating this brutality through demolitions that target the poor while sparing the powerful. His last-minute “reprieve” for the Abuja National Mosque plaza after public backlash proves his policies are arbitrary, not principled.

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This isn’t just political theater—it has real victims. Wike’s demolitions aren’t urban planning; they’re social cleansing. Families who invested their life savings in homes wake up to bulldozers, with no compensation or alternatives. If Abati truly cared, he’d use his platform to organize legal aid for victims, not just score debate points.

While they feud, inflation hits 34%, bandits kidnap schoolchildren, and electricity tariffs skyrocket. The media’s obsession with their spat lets the Tinubu administration off the hook. Wike’s politics thrive on confrontation. If this escalates, his supporters could turn Abuja into a battleground. We’ve seen this before—political grudges in Nigeria often spill blood.

Nigerians must see this feud for what it is: a smokescreen. We should demand policy, not personality wars—holding Wike accountable for providing housing solutions before demolitions, and challenging Abati to launch a sustained investigative series on displacement, not just one-off rants.

Civil society must document demolitions, sue for compensation, and expose land grabs. The courts have ruled against such actions before—we must enforce these precedents. The media must stop amplifying their drama and instead spotlight community-led resistance and policy alternatives.

Abati and Wike are symptoms of a broken system—one where elites fight for relevance while the people suffer. Nigerians mustn’t cheer their circus. We’ve endured enough from men who switch principles for power. The solution isn’t picking a side in their fight. It’s building a Nigeria where such men are irrelevant.

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Jeff Okoroafor - Africans Angle and Opinion Nigeria

Jeff Okoroafor

Jeff Okoroafor is a social accountability advocate and a political commentator focused on governance, accountability, and social justice in West Africa.

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