When a government begins to deploy state institutions to intimidate, harass, or frustrate opposition parties, a critical question arises: who is truly afraid of free and fair elections?
In any functioning democracy, opposition parties are not adversaries of the state; they are vital to it. They provide alternatives, ensure accountability, and strengthen governance through scrutiny. Undermining them through security pressure, selective law enforcement, denial of campaign venues, or political intimidation ultimately weakens the democratic system itself.
A government confident in its performance should have nothing to fear from open political competition. Elections ought to be contests of ideas, track records, and vision not outcomes shaped by suppression or coercion.
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Nigeria deserves a system where political parties campaign freely, citizens vote without fear, and institutions operate with neutrality and integrity. True strength in leadership is not demonstrated by silencing dissent, but by engaging it and prevailing through public trust.
When power relies more on control than on performance, democracy is put at risk. A credible electoral process is not just a political ideal, it is the foundation of legitimacy.
Nigeria belongs to all its citizens, not to any single party or interest group. The responsibility to safeguard democracy rests not only with institutions but with the people, who must remain vigilant and demand transparency, fairness, and accountability in the electoral process.
Only through free and fair elections can genuine leadership emerge.
Written by Festus Edovia, ANIPR, FICM.












