By Albert David
If the initial misinformation surrounding President Julius Maada Bio’s whereabouts during the Middle East conflict was troubling, his subsequent public storytelling has only deepened the crisis of credibility engulfing the Presidency. What should have been a moment of sober reflection and transparent leadership instead became a stage for dramatic embellishments, embellishments that raise even more serious questions about honesty, accountability, and respect for the intelligence of the Sierra Leonean people.
During a religious gathering for Eid al‑Fitr ceremony, an occasion traditionally reserved for humility, truthfulness, and moral clarity, the President narrated a version of events that strains logic and contradicts observable reality. He claimed that the United Arab Emirates allowed only his flight to leave the country, and that UAE officials told him, “We know you’re a military man, but we will take you out the military way.” He further suggested that he insisted on staying behind because he “did not want to leave while there was war.”
This narrative is not merely questionable, it is deeply misleading. At the very same time, foreign nationals, diplomats, business leaders, researchers, and investors and so on were being evacuated or allowed to depart the UAE for their safety. Commercial flights resumed selectively. International travel advisories were issued. Movement was controlled but not frozen. There is no credible evidence that the President of Sierra Leone was uniquely trapped, uniquely targeted, or uniquely extracted. To present such a story, especially in a religious setting, does not only distort the truth. It undermines the moral authority of leadership.
The troubling pattern is now unmistakable: First, the Presidency denied he was in the UAE. Then, the Director of Communications Myk Berewa insisted the President was “in his home, safe and sound.” Government spokespersons dismissed legitimate public concerns as “rumors.” Finally, the President himself delivered a dramatic, self‑praising account that contradicts both his own officials and the observable facts of the situation. This is not a communication error. It is not a misunderstanding. It is a chain of leadership deception, a coordinated effort to control the narrative rather than communicate the truth. Such conduct is unethical, shameful, and dangerously corrosive to democratic integrity.
Leadership is not measured by dramatic storytelling. It is measured by truthfulness, transparency, and accountability, especially in moments of crisis. When a President uses a religious gathering to embellish events, when officials knowingly mislead the public, and when the truth is treated as optional, the consequences are profound:
- It violates the public’s right to credible information. Citizens cannot make informed decisions when their leaders distort reality.
- It erodes constitutional responsibility.
The Presidency is obligated to communicate honestly, not theatrically.
- It undermines national stability.
Misinformation at the highest level creates confusion, distrust, and civic anxiety.
- It weakens democratic culture.
A democracy cannot thrive when truth is sacrificed for political optics.
- It signals bad governance. A government that manipulates narratives cannot be trusted to manage crises responsibly. This is not about politics. It is about principle.
The President’s claim that he alone was granted a special military‑style evacuation is not only implausible, it is irresponsible. It transforms a moment of global danger into a personal heroism tale. It trivializes the seriousness of the conflict. And it disrespects the intelligence of the Sierra Leonean people. Leadership is not theatre.
Governance is not performance. And truth is not a tool to be bent for applause. When leaders elevate themselves above the facts, they diminish the dignity of the office they hold.
Sierra Leone deserves leadership that understands the weight of its words. Leadership that recognizes that: Transparency is not optional. Accountability is not negotiable. Truthfulness is not a weakness, it is the foundation of legitimacy.
The Presidency must not be a place where narratives are crafted to impress, distract, or manipulate. It must be a place where truth is spoken plainly, even when inconvenient.
This moment should serve as a civic lesson, not only for those in power, but for the nation as a whole. A democracy survives only when its leaders respect the truth. A nation thrives only when its citizens are not misled. And public trust endures only when those entrusted with power honor that trust with integrity. Sierra Leoneans deserve leadership that communicates with honesty, governs with humility, and respects the people enough to tell them the truth, without embellishment, without manipulation, and without theatrics.





