By Albert David
What is unfolding in Sierra Leone today demands sober reflection, national awareness, and a renewed commitment to democratic accountability. When a nation begins to normalize the trivialization of its darkest historical wounds, when a President public narratives downplay the suffering of victims, and when governance choices appear disconnected from the lived realities of ordinary citizens, the consequences are profound and far‑reaching.
A nation’s leadership at every level, carries a moral obligation to uphold empathy, discipline, and respect for collective memory. National trauma is never an entertainment as President Bio displayed during the Bo School 120 years occasion. The pain of amputees, survivors, and families affected by the civil war is not a political prop. It is a solemn reminder of why responsible governance, ethical leadership, and institutional integrity matter.
Equally troubling are patterns of misplaced priorities that undermine public confidence:
Communities across the country remain without hospitals and basic medicines, while political offices receive rapid state of art upgrades. Schools across the country deteriorating while resources flow into prestige Presidential projects. Health facilities struggling for basic supplies while fleets of luxury Presidential vehicles expand. Public services weakened while political structures grow stronger.
These contradictions raise legitimate civic questions about governance choices, national priorities, and the direction of public investment. Even more alarming is the growing public concern about illicit financial networks, opaque alliances, and external actors whose influence threatens to distort democratic processes. When illicit enterprises gain proximity to political power, in this case, the financial power-house Jos Leijdekkers alias Omar Sheriff, the risks are enormous. We will continue to see electoral manipulation, institutional weakening, polarized borders and communities. Shrinking civic space, intimidation and suppression, erosion of constitutional norms, and loss of national credibility, especially on the international stage.
These are not abstract dangers, they are real threats to the democratic fabric of Sierra Leone. A nation cannot thrive when its institutions are overshadowed by unregulated financial powerhouses, when accountability is compromised, or when public trust is eroded by secrecy and impunity. Sierra Leoneans deserve governance that strengthens institutions, not undermines them, that protects civic freedoms, not restricts them, that invests in people, not political machinery.
This is a moment for citizens to rise with clarity, courage, and democratic discipline. Not through violence, not through division, but through informed civic resistance, lawful participation, and unwavering insistence on transparency, accountability, and constitutional order. Sierra Leone’s future must not be buried under the weight of manipulation, intimidation, or illicit influence. The nation belongs to its people, to the market women, the teachers, the nurses, the youth, the workers, the farmers, the survivors of war, and the generations yet unborn.
To protect that future, Sierra Leoneans must stay awake, stay principled, and stay united in defending the values that hold a democracy together: truth, accountability, justice, dignity, and respect for human life. This is not merely a political moment, it is a civic responsibility. And history will remember those who stood up when it mattered.




