“A society built on shifting alliances cannot stand firmly; one grounded in accountability can. The choice is not abstract. It shapes our daily reality and our collective future. In the end, actions carry consequences”.
BY BELLO GWARZO ABDULLAHI
“Et tu, Brute?”— the line made famous by William Shakespeare in his portrayal of Julius Caesar’s final moments—has echoed across centuries. The phrase is timeless because it captures a universal human experience: the pain of betrayal by someone once trusted.
In Nigeria today, betrayal is often dismissed with a casual shrug as “just politics” or excused as part of “the Nigerian factor.” In doing so, we normalize what should trouble us. What ought to provoke sober reflection now barely raises eyebrows. That quiet acceptance may, in fact, be the deeper danger.
At its core, betrayal tears at the social contract that holds communities together. Trust is the foundation of every functioning society. Once it weakens, everything becomes conditional. Partnerships turn transactional. Promises lose their weight. Loyalty becomes temporary and suspect. In such an atmosphere of mutual distrust—whether in government chambers, places of worship, traditional institutions, or corporate offices—the pattern remains the same: loyalty is traded for advantage.
Human beings possess reason, empathy, and moral awareness. These qualities distinguish us. When they are suppressed in pursuit of short-term gain, we diminish ourselves and weaken the very structures upon which we depend.
Nigeria’s political culture offers a clear illustration. The Fourth Republic has witnessed frequent defections and shifting alliances across parties. While freedom of association is a constitutional right, constant realignments—often lacking firm ideological grounding—have blurred political identity and diluted accountability. When loyalty is anchored more in access to power than in shared convictions, governance inevitably suffers. Politics becomes less about policy and service, and more about capturing and retaining power, often without adequate regard for the long-term consequences.
The relationship between political patrons and protégés reflects a similar pattern. Alliances formed with enthusiasm may unravel once authority changes hands. What begins as mentorship can evolve into rivalry. The struggle shifts from service to supremacy, and the public interest becomes secondary.
Religious institutions, despite their immense moral authority, are not immune. Congregational divisions frequently arise from internal struggles over influence, resources, or both, rather than theological differences. When this occurs, it leaves believers disillusioned and weakens the moral voice of the institution. Traditional institutions, once sustained by reverence and continuity, are increasingly politicized and have at times become entangled in prolonged succession disputes, eroding communal harmony.
In the business environment, betrayal appears in the form of insider dealings, breached agreements, and broken trust. Even long-standing apprenticeship systems—historically built on honour and communal accountability—can falter when informal understandings lack enforceable safeguards. Agreements that depend solely on goodwill remain inherently vulnerable.
Nigeria is not alone in confronting this challenge. Betrayal is part of the human story everywhere; the difference lies in how societies respond. In the United States and across much of Europe, breaches of contract and fiduciary duty attract serious legal consequences. In the United Kingdom, political defections invite intense public scrutiny and may require electoral reaffirmation. India adopted constitutional safeguards to limit destabilizing party-switching. In Japan, strong cultural emphasis on reputation and collective honour reinforces accountability.
The common lesson is clear: betrayal may never be fully eradicated, but it can be constrained by systems that make it costly.
For Nigeria, meaningful reform must move beyond rhetoric. Strong institutions reduce excessive dependence on personalities. Efficient courts give contracts real force. Regulatory bodies such as the Economic and Financial Crimes Commission and the Independent Corrupt Practices Commission must operate consistently and impartially. Political parties grounded in ideas rather than individuals encourage steadier loyalty. Civic education that prizes principle over personality can help rebuild public trust.
Betrayal may be part of the human condition, but it need not define a nation. Nigeria’s strength has always rested in its resilience and communal spirit. To preserve that strength, trust must be anchored in institutions that reward integrity and discourage opportunism.
A society built on shifting alliances cannot stand firmly; one grounded in accountability can. The choice is not abstract. It shapes our daily reality and our collective future. In the end, actions carry consequences. What we normalize today will determine what we inherit tomorrow.
…Bello Gwarzo Abdullahi, a public affair analyst can be reached via bgabdullahi@gmail.com


