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Home»Column»Prof. Jibrin Ibrahim»The state of the nation, By Prof. Jibrin Ibrahim
Prof. Jibrin Ibrahim

The state of the nation, By Prof. Jibrin Ibrahim

EditorBy EditorJune 12, 2026No Comments6 Mins Read
Prof. Jibrin Ibrahim
Prof. Jibrin Ibrahim
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Today is June 12. As we celebrate, maybe I should say mourn, the great events that followed the annulled election of 12th June 1993, let us not forget that the event was a very long time ago. 33 years is ancient history for a majority of Nigerians, with a population whose median age is 18 years. For those of us of a certain age and a tradition of democratic struggles, June 12 was Nigeria’s rite of passage to becoming a true and enduring democratic society. The big issue is that the June 12 narrative is a story of great heroes and heroines, having key names that include the winner of the June 12, 1993 presidential election, Chief MKO Abiola; his wife, Kudirat; General Shehu Musa Yar’Adua and Pa Alfred Rewane, who are often cited. But maybe the greatest heroes of June 12 were the millions of unsung ordinary Nigerians who came out, contested military rule and literally chased them out of power, gaining a historic victory over military authoritarianism. The ordinary Nigerian today is not celebrating June 12. They are asking the question of why, how and when Nigerian democracy died. The lived reality of the current generation is that the only agency they have seen in centres of political power is powered by greedy looters of the public treasury. The time has come to stop our praise singing about our democracy and its heroes and fully reopen the struggle for democracy in today’s Nigeria.

The Fourth Republic has been in place since 1999. Over that period, the country’s democratic process has been emptied of its essence. One way of understanding what happened to our democracy is to review how reckless political cabals have created a situation in which Nigeria faces a grave threat to its foundational constitutional principle of the separation of powers. Checks and balances between the branches of government have been imperilled. The separation of powers divides government responsibilities into three distinct branches: legislative (makes laws), executive (enforces laws), and judicial (interprets laws). This constitutional framework ensures a system of “checks and balances” that prevents tyranny, preserves individual liberties, and promotes governmental accountability.

The core reasons why separation of powers is essential for modern democracy include:

Preventing Tyranny: By dividing authority across independent branches so that no single person or group can aggregate enough power to form a dictatorship. 

Enabling Checks and Balances: Each branch has the constitutional authority to monitor and limit the others. For instance, the legislature can pass laws, but the executive can veto them, while the judiciary can strike down unconstitutional laws. 

Protecting Human Rights: An independent judiciary ensures that laws are applied fairly and that citizens are shielded from arbitrary government actions or overreach. 

Conscious of these principles, ten of us as concerned Nigerian citizens issued a press release this week expressing our alarm at the increasing threats to the Nigerian Nation, its democratic order and the rule of law. Our assessment of the state of the Nation reveals that Nigeria stands at a dangerous crossroads where rising insecurity, an alarming level of electoral manipulation by the government, and the weakening of democratic institutions are converging into a national crisis that threatens the country’s survival.

The legislative branch has been placed under near-total control of the executive branch. The judiciary appears to have lost both its independence and its integrity. There are no checks on the powers of the executive, who now govern as they please without accountability or respect for the people’s concerns.  Institutions have been compromised, weakened, and subordinated to the interests of the executive arm of government. This erosion of institutional independence has fuelled public distrust to its highest level in our history, creating a crisis of political exclusion and impunity that is pushing violent extremism, organized crime, and communal conflict to a tipping point.

To reverse this trajectory, Nigeria must urgently recommit to democratic accountability, judicial independence, and institutional reforms that strengthen the rule of law. The electoral processes must be transparent, credible, and insulated from executive interference.

The crisis in Nigeria cannot be separated from the broader instability engulfing the Sahel region. The spread of terrorism, arms trafficking, unconstitutional changes of government, and porous borders across countries such as Mali, Burkina Faso, and Niger continues to intensify insecurity in Nigeria and the wider Lake Chad Basin. The collapse of regional cooperation and democratic governance in parts of the Sahel further emboldens armed groups, weakens state authority, and undermines civilian protection across West Africa.

Regional security cooperation between Nigeria and Sahelian states should be revitalized by establishing strong bilateral and multilateral platforms for intelligence sharing, border governance, and community-based peacebuilding initiatives.

Equally important is investing in youth employment, education, social protection, and local conflict resolution mechanisms to address the root causes of radicalization and insecurity.

Recommendations

The government should, as a matter of urgency, recognise that insecurity in the Sahel fuels the Nigerian crisis and that rapprochement between AES (Alliance of Sahel States) and ECOWAS is an important element in Nigeria’s national interest.

The government should immediately appoint a high-level Special Envoy for the Sahel to begin the urgent task of rebuilding trust between Nigeria, the AES  and ECOWAS while revamping regional mechanisms for peace and security.

Civil society organisations should actively sensitize citizens and strengthen public demand for accountability. Nigerians must be bold and courageous in protecting civic rights and resisting the current climate of restricting civic space.

We call on the Private Sector as critical stakeholders in the nation-state agenda to continue to support and demand accountability in governance and the promotion of the rule of law as the basic premise of economic progress and nation-building. Professional bodies and associations must rise to the challenge of building a broad national consensus to oppose tyranny and ensure the maintenance of checks and balances in governance and the protection of the rule of law.

We call on our traditional leaders and members of the clergy to rise to the full weight of their moral and civic authority to promote peaceful co-existence, solidarity, and inter-faith dialogue to arrest the current slide to criminality and civil disorder.

Given the clear and consistent indications of the lack of neutrality and competence of INEC, professional bodies such as the Nigerian Bar Association, Unions, and other civic groups must set up a mechanism to engage the electoral body to ensure that the 2027 elections are free, fair and credible.

The Judiciary must address the perception of its complicity in stalling the democratic processes.  It must remain independent and uphold the rule of law. As a matter of urgency, the Nigerian Bar Association must call its members to order for professional conduct and strengthen its monitoring of the judiciary; it must stay alert and patriotic and ensure political actors play by the rules. The National Judicial Council must set up a framework for holding judges accountable for decisions they take in the context of the electoral process.

Signatories to the statement are: Dr. Husseini Abdu, Amb. Fatima Balla OON, Dr. Usman Bugaje, Prof. Ibrahim Gambari, CON Dr. Yahaya Hashim, Professors Jibrin Ibrahim, Attahiru Muhammadu Jega OFR, Mohammed Kuna, Abubakar Balarabe Mahmoud, SAN, OON and Malam Kabiru Yusuf

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