Across Nigeria today, millions of citizens wake up each morning to hardship, uncertainty, and frustration, while many politicians continue to celebrate power as though leadership is an achievement in itself rather than a responsibility to serve the people.
The suffering of ordinary Nigerians has become impossible to ignore. Families struggle to afford food, transportation, healthcare, and education. Businesses are collapsing under economic pressure, unemployment continues to rise, insecurity persists in many parts of the country, and basic infrastructure remains inadequate. Yet, despite these realities, political leaders often appear more focused on power, political calculations, and personal interests than on the welfare of the people they were elected to serve.
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This growing disconnect between leadership and the masses has weakened public confidence in governance. Elections come with promises of transformation, accountability, and development, but for many citizens, those promises disappear immediately after victory is secured. Politics increasingly appears less about public service and more about personal ambition, influence, and survival within the political class.
Nigeria’s greatest tragedy is not the absence of resources but the failure to properly manage them for national development. A country blessed with enormous human talent, natural wealth, and economic potential should not still be battling extreme poverty, poor healthcare, inadequate electricity, insecurity, and youth unemployment at this level.
Many Nigerians are frustrated by a system where public resources meant for development are too often mismanaged while the people continue to endure hardship. The widening gap between the lifestyle of political elites and the daily realities of ordinary citizens has only deepened anger and disappointment across the country.
Even more painful is the fact that economic hardship has weakened the voice of many citizens. A struggling population becomes vulnerable, fearful, and less able to demand accountability from those in power. This dangerous cycle continues to protect poor leadership and weaken democratic responsibility.
Still, Nigeria must not lose hope.
The country is filled with hardworking, honest, and patriotic citizens who genuinely desire progress, justice, and development. What Nigeria needs is leadership driven by integrity, competence, compassion, and vision; leaders who see public office as a platform for service rather than personal enrichment.
Citizens also have an important role to play. Democracy cannot thrive when people remain silent in the face of poor governance. Nigerians must continue to demand transparency, accountability, and responsible leadership at every level of government. The future of the country cannot be surrendered to greed, corruption, and selfish political interests.
Nigeria deserves leaders who will place the welfare of the people above personal ambition, leaders who understand that true leadership is measured not by power or luxury, but by impact, sacrifice, and service to humanity.
Until leadership begins to reflect service, responsibility, and genuine concern for the people, the suffering of ordinary Nigerians will continue to overshadow the nation’s enormous potential.
Written by Festus Edovia, ANIPR, FICM.




















