By Albert David
What is unfolding is not an isolated online outburst but a calculated pattern of behaviour. Sylvia has positioned herself as a digital surrogate for Fatima, amplifying narratives that serve interests far beyond her own. Her attacks on Zainab are not spontaneous, nor are they rooted in honest political disagreement. They are part of a deliberate, self‑serving, and strategically coordinated effort to discredit a woman who once stated publicly that neither Sylvia Olayinka Blyden nor Fatima Maada Bio represents the kind of female leadership “Mama Salone” is prepared for.
This context matters. It reveals a malicious and self‑centred campaign, one that relies on distortion, emotional manipulation, and the weaponisation of social media to undermine Zainab’s credibility. The intent is not debate, it is demeaning, deceptive, and fundamentally undemocratic. It exploits the vulnerabilities of the digital space to manufacture hostility, mislead the public, and silence a dissenting female voice.
Such conduct is not only ethically troubling, it is civically corrosive. It erodes the standards of public discourse, normalises cyber‑bullying as a political tool, and reduces national dialogue to personal vendettas disguised as commentary. The manipulation is subtle enough to appear organic, yet strategic enough to inflict reputational harm. It is irresponsible and a dishonest manoeuvre, designed to mislead the public while shielding the true beneficiary of the attacks.
In a democratic society, disagreement is expected, but coordinated digital harassment, bullying, and intimidation masquerading as political expression is a dangerous deviation from democratic norms. It undermines trust, distorts public perception, and weaponises influence in ways that are deeply harmful to civic integrity.
To Ms Sylvia Olayinka Blyden, there comes a moment in every public journey when one must pause and examine not just what is being said, but what one is becoming through those choices. Influence, whether personal or borrowed, carries a civic weight. When it is used to diminish others, especially through digital hostility, it stops being influence and becomes a liability to one’s own integrity.
You are capable of more than reactive commentary or proxy battles fought on behalf of others. Ethical standards demand that every public voice, including yours, be guided by honesty, restraint, and respect for democratic space. When disagreement turns into targeted online aggression, it does not weaken the other person; it weakens the moral standing of the one who engages in it.
A democratic society depends on the courage to debate ideas, not the impulse to demean individuals. It depends on the discipline to rise above personal loyalties and act in ways that strengthen, rather than poison, the public sphere. You have an opportunity to model that discipline, to choose clarity over distortion, dignity over hostility, and integrity over impulse.
Stepping back from harmful narratives is not a sign of weakness, it is a sign of maturity, self-respect, and civic responsibility. The country is watching all of us, and history is often kinder to those who chose principle when it was easier to choose provocation.





