Anthony Airewele & Co

Anthony Airewele & Co Anthony Airewele &co.is a law firm of professionals with higher competence in all area of law in Nigeria.

16/11/2025

Nigeria Is Not a Diarchy: Civil–Military Balance, Public Emotion, and the Misplaced Narratives of the Wike–Yarima Confrontation.
By
Sam Kargbo

Caveat:

This is not, in any way, a sweeping castigation of the Nigerian Military. Far from it. Nigeria’s constitutional democracy and Fourth Republic have benefited immensely from the cooperation, professionalism, and institutional maturity of the Armed Forces. The military has borne the weight of internal and external threats—often at extraordinary human cost—and that sacrifice should command the respect of any rational observer.
This intervention in the ongoing conversation about the confrontation between a naval officer and the Minister of the FCTA is not an indictment of the military as an institution; rather, it is a cautionary note, a red flag.
Public reactions to political incidents frequently reveal more about collective psychology than about the incidents themselves. The confrontation at Plot 1946 in Gaduwa District—where Wike, FCTA officials, and the Commissioner of Police were barred from accessing public land by naval personnel acting on the instructions of a retired service chief—has become a mirror reflecting Nigeria’s unresolved anxieties about power, authority, and personality politics.
What should have triggered a sober national conversation about lawlessness, the abuse of military authority, and the subordination of civil agencies to brute force instead degenerated into celebratory mockery of Wike. The emotional intensity of the public response reveals the workings of displacement, affective polarization, and cognitive simplification—mechanisms through which complex institutional failures are transformed into personalized battles.
Yet Nigeria is not, and constitutionally cannot be, a diarchy. The military is subject to civilian authority, and the incident exposes a troubling erosion of this foundational principle.
The heroization of Lt. Yarima represents a dangerous encouragement of military overreach. Public schadenfreude—derived from watching a disliked political figure challenged—must never be elevated above the imperatives of constitutional order. Celebrating insubordination because it embarrasses a polarizing official is a perilous precedent. A democracy cannot afford to confuse emotional satisfaction with institutional wisdom.

I. Introduction

The confrontation on 11 November 2025 between Nyesom Wike, Nigeria’s Minister of the Federal Capital Territory, and Lt. Ahmad M. Yarima of the Nigerian Navy has generated a level of national debate that far exceeds the material facts of the incident. What should have sparked a sober reflection on the misuse of military authority, the growing willingness of uniformed officers to contest civilian institutions, and the troubling implications of a retired service chief deploying serving personnel to obstruct statutory agencies instead evolved into a referendum on the personality of the Minister. The emotions directed toward Wike—shaped by years of political
controversy, governance disputes, and partisan realignments—were swiftly unleashed, creating a tidal wave of condemnations that washed away the core issue: the unconstitutional subordination of civil authority to military force.

Nigeria remains a constitutional democracy with a formal structure that places civilian institutions at the apex of governance. Yet, as the reaction to the Gaduwa incident makes clear, public attitudes are increasingly shaped less by constitutionalism than by personal and emotional biases. This divergence between legal norms and popular reaction raises deep concerns about the health of Nigeria’s democratic culture, the fragility of its civil–military boundaries, and the susceptibility of political judgment to affective polarization.

This article argues that the confrontation between Wike and Lt. Yarima exposed a latent crisis in Nigeria’s civil–military relations—one obscured by a psychological pattern of displacement in which individuals focused on personal antipathy rather than institutional principle. The incident underscores the urgent need to reaffirm the constitutional doctrine that the armed forces remain subordinate to civilian authority and that Nigeria is not—and must not drift toward becoming—a diarchy.

II. Constitutional Supremacy and the Limits of Military Authority
Nigeria’s constitutional design establishes an unequivocal hierarchy: elected leaders and civil institutions govern; the armed forces execute roles defined by civilian authority. This foundational rule exists not as a symbolic preference but as a historical safeguard. Post-colonial African states, Nigeria included, have often witnessed the consequences of blurred civil–military lines: governance paralysis, institutional decay, politicized command structures, and cycles of military intervention.
Against this backdrop, the events at Plot 1946 in the Gaduwa District are especially troubling. The land in question is a designated buffer zone—legally reserved for public environmental use and explicitly excluded from residential or commercial development. It was unlawfully partitioned and sold by private actors, including to a former
Chief of Naval Staff, Vice Admiral Awwal Zubairu Gambo. When officers of the FCTA Development Control attempted to enforce the law—first through posting stop-work notices and then through direct inspection—they were thwarted by uniformed naval personnel stationed at the site.
The Director of Development Control, after being denied entry, attempted institutional escalation. He contacted Lt. Yarima, advised him that his superior might have been misled because the land was not legally developable, and sent text messages urging compliance with statutory restrictions. These warnings were ignored. Even the Director of Security in the FCT, seeking guidance from the Chief of Defence Staff, was informed that the military could not intervene because Admiral Gambo had retired—an interpretation that, while procedurally convenient, sidestepped the fundamental issue: serving personnel cannot be deployed for private purposes.
By the time the Minister visited the site, the road had been barricaded, the naval personnel had asserted they were acting under “orders from above,” and civil authority had been directly challenged. This constituted a breach of constitutional order—one that cannot be legitimized by the emotional appeal or public admiration of military defiance.

III. Public Emotion and the Distortion of Political Judgment
The national reaction to the incident reveals a second, equally significant problem: the degree to which political judgment in Nigeria is shaped by emotional narratives rather than institutional principles. Wike is a polarizing figure. His confrontational approach, his political maneuvers, his rhetoric, and his unabashed style have created strong emotional responses across the political spectrum. For many Nigerians—already burdened by economic hardship, distrust of political elites, and frustration with governance—the incident provided an opportunity for emotional catharsis. The image of a Minister being rebuked by a young officer became a symbolic moment in which pent-up resentment found expression.
This psychological mechanism, known as displacement, allows individuals to direct their frustrations toward a convenient figure even when the true source of their discontent lies elsewhere.

The Navy officer’s defiance became a proxy victory over broader political dissatisfaction. The public celebration of the officer’s conduct, therefore, says less about the facts of the case and more about the emotional economy of contemporary Nigerian politics.
Such responses, however, obscure the actual stakes. The issue was not whether Wike deserved public embarrassment; it was whether Nigeria should normalize the idea that a retired military official may deploy armed personnel against a sitting Minister, a civilian agency, or any organ of government. The emotional excitement surrounding the exchange of words—particularly Wike’s question (“Are you a fool?”) and Yarima’s retort (“I am not a fool; I am a commissioned officer”)—allowed the public to fixate on personalities rather than principles.
This diversion is dangerous. Democracies rely not only on rules but on a political culture that understands and respects institutional boundaries. When personal dislike eclipses constitutional reasoning, citizens inadvertently become accomplices in eroding the very structures that protect them.

IV. Militarized Bravado Versus Constitutional Bravery
In the aftermath, musician and social critic Seun Kuti offered a remark that cut through much of the noise: Lt. Yarima’s true bravery would have been demonstrated in refusing to carry out an unlawful order, not in enforcing it with military vigor. This observation reflects a deeper truth about civil–military dynamics: courage is not demonstrated by performing illegality with confidence, but by upholding legal norms even when pressured by superiors.
The distinction between bravado and bravery is foundational to professional military ethics. A constitutional military is not merely one that refrains from coups; it is one in which officers recognize the supremacy of law over loyalty, legality over command, and institutional restraint over martial assertiveness. The ritualistic invocation of “acting on orders” cannot justify actions that contravene
statutory authority, particularly when carried out on behalf of a retired officer engaged in private property development.
When a society mistakes military defiance for heroism, it encourages a dangerous incentive structure: one that rewards officers for resisting civilian authority rather than respecting it. If public opinion becomes a cheering squad for military insubordination, the normative constraints that prevent democratic backsliding weaken.

V. Institutional Signaling and the Ambiguities of Military Response
The Defence Headquarters’ cryptic social-media post—“UNSHAKEN. UNBENT. UNBROKEN.”—though open to interpretation, was widely perceived as a symbolic endorsement of the naval officer’s conduct. The Minister of Defence’s subsequent statement, affirming that officers acting in “lawful duty” would be protected, added to the confusion by presenting a legally ambiguous scenario as a matter of routine procedure.
Signals from military institutions matter. They shape internal culture, influence public reaction, and either reinforce or undermine the principle of civilian supremacy. Even unintentional ambiguity can embolden those who perceive military authority as a counterweight to civilian governance. In societies with histories of military intervention, such signals carry heightened consequences.
The reluctance of the military hierarchy to clearly distance itself from the actions on Plot 1946 raises serious questions about institutional self-perception. A professional military must be as committed to internal discipline as to external security. It must demonstrate that it does not tolerate misuse of uniform or authority, whether by serving officers or by retirees who seek to politicize military networks for private gain.

VI. Preventing the Drift Toward Diarchy
A diarchy emerges when military and civilian authorities exercise overlapping or competing power, undermining the unity of command essential to democratic order. Nigeria formally rejected this
arrangement in 1999, but the Gaduwa incident reveals the subtle ways in which diarchic tendencies can resurface: through personal influence, institutional ambiguity, cultural deference to uniforms, and public romanticization of military defiance.
To prevent a drift toward diarchy, Nigeria must reaffirm core principles:
1. Civil authority is non-negotiable—no military officer, serving or retired, may countermand a civilian agency’s lawful actions.
2. Private interests cannot command public force—the use of serving personnel to enforce private property claims is incompatible with constitutional order.
3. Public sentiment must not be allowed to legitimize illegality—emotional reactions cannot be allowed to eclipse institutional reasoning.
4. The military must actively repudiate misuse of authority—silence or ambiguity enables future transgressions.
5. Civil institutions must exercise their authority confidently—hesitation signals weakness and invites challenge.
Nigeria’s democratic consolidation depends not only on electoral processes but on the daily enforcement of these principles.

Conclusion

The Wike–Yarima confrontation is more than a moment of political drama; it is a case study in the fragility of Nigeria’s civil–military boundaries and the susceptibility of public judgment to emotional distortion. While Wike's personality may evoke strong reactions, personal sentiment must never override constitutional principle. The central issue is clear: a retired military officer deployed uniformed service personnel to obstruct lawful civil authority, and large segments of the public celebrated the officer who executed that unlawful order.
Democracies fracture when citizens normalize military interference, celebrate insubordination, or fail to distinguish bravado from legality. Nigeria’s historical experiences make this especially perilous. The country cannot afford to drift—subtly or symbolically—toward a
system in which military authority coexists in parallel with civilian governance.
Nigeria is not a diarchy. It must never become one. Civil authority must remain unchallenged, not because politicians are flawless, but because the alternative is a political order in which law bows to the barrel of a gun and public emotion becomes a tool for legitimizing institutional decay.
In this moment, clarity is essential: the rule of law, not the charisma of officers or the unpopularity of ministers, must guide Nigeria’s democratic pathway. The nation’s future stability depends on it.

Sam Kargbo is a Senior Advocate of Nigeria who writes from Abuja, FCT.

01/10/2025

The Nigeria state is now a complex but redeemable entity.we shall reclaim it through a bloodless revolution.

Shout out to my newest followers! Excited to have you onboard! Saima Mutilifa, Ado Barde Hamza, M Viji
01/10/2025

Shout out to my newest followers! Excited to have you onboard! Saima Mutilifa, Ado Barde Hamza, M Viji

22/03/2024

Very Deep and Thoughtful Article....🤔🤔🤔🤔🤔🤔
BRIFFAULT’S LAW

When Melinda Gates saw no more purpose in staying with Bill Gates, she divorced him. The same thing happened to Jeff Bezos and millions of other men. This has led men to coin this expression that if you are a married man, it is only because your wife still finds you useful.

This brings us to Briffault’s law.

This law was formulated by Robert Briffault (1876-1948), an English surgeon, anthropologist, and author. In the field of sociology, many experts treat it as a scientific law.

Briffault’s law says that “The female, not the male, determines all the conditions of the animal family. Where the female can derive no benefit from association with the male, no such association takes place.”

This law also implies the following (also called Corollaries):
1. Past benefits provided by the male do not provide for continued or future association.
2. Any agreement where the male provides a current benefit in return for a promise of future association is null and void as soon as the male has provided the benefit (see corollary 1).
3. A promise of future benefit has limited influence on current/future association, with the influence inversely proportionate to the length of time until the benefit will be given and directly proportionate to the degree to which the female trusts the male.

Now, In economic terms, Briffault’s law means that the male within a relationship is subject to the law of diminishing returns. Meaning he continually has to offer something. Benefits in the past are rendered void, and his promise to do so is worthless if he fails to provide future benefits in time.

That benefit can be various things: companionship, status, money, good genes for offspring, protection and so on. Briffault’s law holds true for whatever kind of relationship: a long-lasting marriage, or one that ends in divorce (in that case the man always fails to deliver benefits (i.e. loses his jobs, gets ill, can no longer keep her satisfied)), or a one night stand, or seeing a pr******te (for the transactional relationship ends as soon as the paid for act is done).

Briffault’s law highlights both female hypergamy and the non-reciprocal nature of most relationships.

Our fathers did not teach us this .😰😰😰😰😰😰

07/01/2023

No controversy

Our tired PresidentDecember 29, 2022 • By Hakeem Baba-Ahmed‘Nearly all men can stand adversity.If you want to test a ma...
30/12/2022

Our tired President
December 29, 2022

By Hakeem Baba-Ahmed

‘Nearly all men can stand adversity.If you want to test a man’s character, give him power.’– Abraham Lincoln

PRESIDENT Muhammadu Buhari says, for the umpteenth time, that he cannot wait for the end of his term. He says he plans to live as far away from Abuja as he can when he serves his two terms out.
Recently, he was specific in preferring Daura, his hometown, where he will live in peace without being troubled by anyone.
In recent days, he had lamented that he has not been as appreciated as he should have been, in spite of doing his best. On one or two occasions, he had hinted that he was tired of leading the nation. On the whole, you will be forgiven for thinking that our President is behaving like a pained married person who cannot wait for a divorce to come through.
President Buhari appears resigned to a single-item legacy which he believes he can leave intact: a credible election. His understanding of credible election appears to be one in which INEC has all it needs in funding, and one in which no one, in his party or in the country, will see his hands in determining candidates or outcomes and consequences.
To be fair to the President, limiting himself to the 2023 election matters is not a bad strategy. What else will stand scrutiny as an outstanding legacy by May, 2023? He certainly cannot refer to his three key promises on fighting corruption, fixing the economy and securing the country when he judges himself. He and his beleaguered salesmen have shiploads of excuses for his incredible achievements of making these key matters a lot worse than he met them. The country has its own opinion over the lamentable record of the administration in these areas.
People who recently crafted voluminous and expensive advertorials and media releases celebrating the birthday of the President must have scratched heads to hair roots searching for language to use which will not further offend a country labouring under a record of spectacular failure that will take the best part of the next decade to reverse.
The laziest accolades were those that hailed him as a man of integrity, or more specifically, the President who was not corrupt. The insult to intelligence of Nigerians screamed in the face of some of the most outrageous cases of breathtaking corruption being alleged or tried against people who work right under the President’s nose. Perhaps President Buhari never really had a sense of smell. This is the only explanation for the stench around the entire petroleum and gas sector where he is also the Minister, the CBN, the banking and finance sector, telecommunications, defence and security institutions and just about every institution or system that is relevant to governance and the private sector.
The excuses for failure to improve the economy, secure jobs and improve diversification in eight years should be carefully documented by students of policy as reference material when discussing leadership failure. From underestimating the damage inherited by PDP administrations, to crash in cost of crude prices, to COVID, to crude theft and sabotage, every excuse has been offered to explain why an administration is about to leave a country a lot poorer than it should be, by any standards of sound judgement. Sound judgement will rank among the major deficiencies of President Buhari, especially when applied against failure to manage an economy with better hands, ideas and stronger political will.
No area will indict Buhari’s record more that the failure to secure the country. In a little less than eight years, Nigeria moved from a country battling an incipient insurgency feeding on insensitivity and incompetence, to a country at the mercy of the multiple threats, some of which have raised questions about the entire capacity of the Nigerian state to protect citizens.
The insurgency Buhari inherited developed international links and dug in; irredentism developed muscles strong enough to hold an entire region hostage and threaten the unity of the country; armed gangs targeted the nation’s soft underbelly (its large, unprotected population) to raise banditry and kidnapping into monsters that stalk millions of citizens, and opportunistic crimes blossomed where corruption and weak leadership had virtually crippled public safety, and law and order institutions. It will be a badge Buhari will not want to wear, but the truth is that under his leadership, Nigeria has become one of the most dangerous countries to live in.
It says to a lot about Buhari’s hands-off approach to governance that he thinks he has done all there is to do to have a credible election in February 2023. It will not be unfair to assume that someone forgot to read him the leadership and governance manual in 2015, and now it is looking increasingly clear that he is not reading the writing on the wall that should tell him that even his pet dream about a credible election is under threat.
A credible election is one conducted under a safe and secure environment; in which all votes count under a free and fair process; results are transparently compiled and contestants and voters respect rules and accept outcomes. Security of the electoral environment and of the ballot are the two most important requirements of a credible election in 2023, and both are threatened. Unfortunately for President Buhari’s limited governance approach, they are also his to fix.
Unfortunately for the nation, it does not appear that President Buhari thinks he has to radically improve the security environment in spite of increasing breaches that could get worse by the day. His textbook approach is to leave it all to those he trusts to do the job, and neither experience nor commonsense have taught him that he has responsibility to do more than appoint people into sensitive positions.
As things stand, IPOB/ESN, or, as they are more popularly known, unknown persons, will ultimately decide if millions of voters in the five states of the South-East vote or not. Large numbers of communities in many parts of the North will have to depend on the disposition of bandits and insurgents towards allowing them vote. Politicians have trashed peace accords, and their followers now know that pretenses at selling visions, plans and promises are over.
Election-related violence will intensify, and the President will have little say on its intensity or impact. His ‘neutrality’ will free his party to fight its way to victory in an election in which it also has to shoulder the liabilities of his legacies. The opposition will fight dirty, dusting an old rule book for a new battle in which friends and enemies change places at dizzying pace. This is an election that will decide whether the nation loses the South-East or regains it. Another President will be looking at options and scenarios regarding the region. President Buhari appears to think this problem will be more appropriately left to his successor, no matter how he emerges.
President Buhari is tired of being Nigeria’s President, and cannot wait to relocate to Daura. He thinks that will buy him peace, but he is likely to change his mind because Daura is part of his State of Katsina which has not known peace in the last few years. To be honest, Nigerians are also tired of a President who will not govern.
We should be grateful that the democratic system puts time limits, but the person who is indifferent over our journey to the elections, their conduct and outcomes cannot wish this country well. Neither President Buhari nor Nigerians can afford the luxury of expecting a happy future because he is no longer President.

President Buhari appears to think this problem will be more appropriately left to his successor, no matter how he emerges

30/12/2022

The National Assembly increase of its own budget to N228.1bn, is nothing but legislative stealing. What is the need of the increment when they are leaving May? They should instead reduce their budget for contributing nothing to our nascent democracy .Criminals everywhere .

28/12/2022

The builder of lagos

Lagos is quiet,, owners of lagos has gone to spend the Christmas and New year in their villages.
28/12/2022

Lagos is quiet,, owners of lagos has gone to spend the Christmas and New year in their villages.

27/12/2022
What a life  circle
17/12/2022

What a life circle

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