By Albert David
Sierra Leone stands at a defining crossroads. After years of democratic strain, shrinking civic space, and a crisis of public trust in national institutions, the All People’s Congress (APC) has returned to governance with a renewed mandate to defend constitutional order and respond to the cries of ordinary citizens. Many Sierra Leoneans now overwhelmingly believe that the APC has demonstrated a willingness to hear their voices, see their struggles, and feel their pain, a sharp contrast to the prolonged silence and inaction that previously deepened national frustration.
This moment is not merely political. It is constitutional, civic, and moral. It is a moment that demands clarity, accountability, and principled leadership. The recent engagement of international moral guarantors, embassies, regional bodies, and global partners, has been a stabilizing force at a time when Sierra Leone’s democratic fabric has been under severe pressure. Their call for the government to act in good faith, honour commitments, and respect agreed recommendations reflects a broader truth, that Sierra Leone is not isolated from global norms.
The country is a signatory to a wide range of international treaties and conventions, including The Geneva Conventions, The Addis Ababa and Abuja frameworks, United Nations treaties on human rights, governance, and democratic accountability, Regional and continental agreements on rule of law, due process, and political freedoms. These are not symbolic signatures. They are binding commitments that require transparency, responsible governance, and respect for fundamental rights.
The people of Sierra Leone are now openly urging international partners to go further, to provide stronger oversight, to insist on compliance, and to ensure that the government honours the recommendations designed to protect democratic integrity. This is not foreign interference; it is the enforcement of standards Sierra Leone voluntarily accepted.
While international actors have stepped in with clarity and purpose, Sierra Leone’s local moral guarantors have repeatedly failed to meet their constitutional and ethical responsibilities. Many citizens now view them as unreliable in moments of national crisis, silent in the face of intimidation, harassment, and unlawful incarceration, their silent is a complicit in the shrinking of civic space, they have demonstrated unwillingness to challenge or question electoral malpractices or institutional abuses, and they have detached from the lived realities of ordinary Sierra Leoneans.
Their silence has not been neutral. It has been harmful, misleading, and deeply destabilizing. Instead of safeguarding the public interest, they have allowed democratic erosion to take root, undermining trust, weakening institutions, and damaging the nation’s international reputation. Against this backdrop, many Sierra Leoneans credit the APC for taking a firm stand against excessive oppression and intimidation, the relentless harassment and politically motivated arrests, the unlawful incarceration and selective justice, bad governance and institutional manipulation, and against electoral malpractice and democratic irregularities.
By challenging these abuses, the APC has positioned itself, at least in the eyes of many citizens, as a necessary counterweight to authoritarian tendencies and a defender of constitutional order. Their return to governance is seen by supporters and the public as a corrective step toward restoring democratic balance and national stability. Sierra Leone cannot afford another cycle of democratic backsliding. The country needs a new compact, one grounded in transparency and public accountability, respect for human rights and due process, independent institutions free from political interference, and credible elections and responsible governance, and active oversight from both local and international guarantors.
The people of Sierra Leone are demanding a governance culture that is ethical, democratic, developmental, and constitutionally grounded, not one shaped by intimidation, deception, or institutional betrayal. This moment is an opportunity for Sierra Leone to reclaim its democratic credentials. The APC’s return to governance, the renewed involvement of international moral guarantors, and the public’s insistence on accountability together create a rare opening for national renewal.
But this opportunity will only matter if the government respects its obligations, International partners maintain firm oversight, Local guarantors rediscover their moral courage, and citizens remain vigilant and engaged. Sierra Leone deserves a future where governance is not defined by fear, manipulation, or silence, but by justice, transparency, and constitutional integrity.





