Connect with us

Africa

When Nations Die: The Wike-Yerima Metaphor -By Leonard Karshima Shilgba

Nigeria’s future depends on the earnest, consistent regard for law, authority, and process. If the President allows this incident to pass with ambiguity or partiality, he undermines one of the most basic pillars of statehood: that every person—no matter junior or senior—recognises the rule of law. He sets up a governance culture where emotion, ethnocentrism, and selective outrage dominate instead of reason, constitution, and public interest.

Published

on

Leonard Karshima Shilgba

To the leadership of the Federal Republic of Nigeria—especially President Bola Ahmed Tinubu and his ministers—and citizens.

It is with grave disappointment and deep concern that I address the recent incident involving Minister of the FCT, Nyesom Wike, representing the President, and a junior naval officer, Lieutenant Yerima, who chose to assert himself as a security guard at a private construction site in Abuja and then, astonishingly, refused to recognise the civil authority of the Minister of the Federal Capital Territory (FCT), constitutionally governing the FCT on behalf of the President and Commander in Chief of the Armed Forces of the Federal Republic of Nigeria.

This debacle reveals far more than a clash of personalities. It exposes the rot of selective obedience to the law, the breakdown of institutional hierarchy, and the dangerous elevation of emotion over reason in our public discourse.

1. On the question of duty and authority:

* Was Lieutenant Yerima legitimately posted at that private construction site as part of his official naval duty? If the answer is “yes,” then we must ask: under whose orders, under which legal instrument, and under which ministerial or military command structure? If the answer is “no,” then his presence alone was illegitimate—and his defiance of a minister representing the President becomes not composure, but crass insubordination.

* Can the Minister of the FCT—acting on behalf of the President—be denied access to a site within the FCT by a junior military officer? The very principle of democratic civil authority demands that the chain of command be clear. If the President’s representative is obstructed by a subordinate, the state has begun to unravel.

2. On the culture of selective outrage and tribal dimensions:
Many Nigerians celebrate Lieutenant Yerima’s “calmness,” his poise. Yet poise cannot override lawful authority. What we are witnessing is a dangerous pattern: tribal or ethnic sympathies determine who gets celebrated, and whose affronts to the law get ignored. When that happens, the nation drifts from justice into favouritism, from rule of law into rule of prejudice.

3. On the ministerial response—and the implications for loyalty and unity:

The reaction from the Minister of Defence—apparently treating the episode as inconsequential—should be a wake-up call to President Tinubu. If a junior officer can risk defying a minister of state and the minister tasked with the FCT, and the Defence Ministry says “nothing to see here,” then the system of civilian oversight and ministerial accountability is under threat. A government that allows pockets of impunity in its security apparatus cannot claim to be serious about reform or governance. And let me add that the Wike-Yerima episode mirrors how Nigeria is “fighting terrorism.” No wonder the cancer remains incurable! There are sabotaging forces within the government.

4. On the national stakes:

A nation that cannot enforce its boundaries of legitimate authority is by definition a lawless nation where terrorism can flourish. And a lawless nation is a “disgraced country” (apologies to President Trump). If citizens believe law is optional or negotiable, public institutions are hollowed out, and every conflict becomes a matter of personal privilege rather than public order.

5. On the imperative for presidential leadership:

President Tinubu must not remain silent. If the facts show that Lieutenant Yerima was out of line, acting privately rather than as part of his official duty as a naval officer, then swift and unequivocal action must follow. Either the President withdraws or disciplines Minister Wike for failing to enforce his own rights and responsibilities (which he couldn’t have when military officers, led by the defiant Naval Lieutenant Yerima, brandishing guns threatened his life)—or the President affirms the minister’s authority, disavows the junior officer’s defiance, and reasserts the supremacy of civil authority over security personnel. To do otherwise is to signal that might makes right, that protocols and hierarchies are optional, and that emotional spectacle outranks institutional order.

6. To those celebrating the junior officer:

I say this to you: “Examine your moral compass.” Calm demeanour does *not* excuse undermining the law. The applause you give today may be the very precedent that robs someone else of access to justice tomorrow. Celebrate virtue, yes—but not when that virtue is a cloak for disobedience.

Nigeria’s future depends on the earnest, consistent regard for law, authority, and process. If the President allows this incident to pass with ambiguity or partiality, he undermines one of the most basic pillars of statehood: that every person—no matter junior or senior—recognises the rule of law. He sets up a governance culture where emotion, ethnocentrism, and selective outrage dominate instead of reason, constitution, and public interest.

This moment is far bigger than one construction-site altercation. It is a test of Nigeria’s maturity as a republic. Let us pray that our leadership passes this test with integrity, clarity and courage.

© Shilgba

Continue Reading
Click to comment

Leave a Reply

Your email address will not be published. Required fields are marked *

Trending Contents

Topical Issues

Festus Adedayo Festus Adedayo
Africa11 hours ago

Aso Rock and Kitoye Ajasa’s Lickspittle Press -By Festus Adedayo

The only way the Nigerian media can play its rightful role in the success of democracy, especially the success of...

SOLDIER AND WIKE SOLDIER AND WIKE
Africa14 hours ago

On the Matter of Wike and Yerima: A Respectful Rejoinder to Professor Sebastine Hon, SAN -By Vitus Ozoke, PhD

And in a democracy governed by law, common sense must never be treated as a crime. In a constitutional democracy,...

Abiodun Komolafe Abiodun Komolafe
Africa22 hours ago

Ijebu-Jesa Grammar School at 70! (2) -By Abiodun KOMOLAFE

As I have argued earlier, IJGS’s alumni commitment is demonstrated through various renovation projects. I stand by it! For instance,...

Nyesom-Wike-FCT-minister- Nyesom-Wike-FCT-minister-
Africa1 day ago

Wike’s Backlash And The PR Lesson He Can’t Afford To Ignore -By Isaac Asabor

As Edward Bernays warned decades ago, “You can’t hide facts that are visible to everyone; you can only adjust perception...

Wike and YERIMA Wike and YERIMA
Africa2 days ago

Lt. Yarima vs Minister Wike: A Romantic Analysis -By Abdulkadir Salaudeen

One most important lesson is that our rulers in Nigeria should adopt a new matrix for decent behavior. It is...

Tinubu Tinubu
Africa2 days ago

FG’s Suspension of 15% Fuel Import Duty: A Holistic Step Toward Economic Relief and Market Stability -By Blaise Udunze

A humane reform process ensures that no policy, however noble, becomes a burden too heavy for its people to bear....

Forgotten Dairies2 days ago

Debate: Yerima Deserves Apology, Not Wike -By Isaac Asabor

When soldiers abuse power, we rightly condemn them. When politicians do the same, we excuse them, and that double standard...

Wike and YERIMA Wike and YERIMA
Africa3 days ago

The Unnecessary Altercation Between the Minister and the Military Officer -By Tochukwu Jimo Obi

The courts are there to address issues like this, to determine lawful ownership, to adjudicate allocation disputes, and to enforce...

Emmanuel Ishie-Johnson Emmanuel Ishie-Johnson
Africa3 days ago

Promoting Restorative Justice and Victims’ Empowerment in Nigerian Criminal Justice System -By Ishie-Johnson Emmanuel Esq.

Promoting restorative justice and empowering victims within Nigeria’s criminal justice system is essential for addressing the root causes of crime,...

NYESOM WIKE NYESOM WIKE
Forgotten Dairies3 days ago

Wike: A Minister of Particular Concern -By Patrick Iwelunmor

Wike remains a minister of particular concern because his actions and words carry consequences for the reputation of governance itself....