Democracy Day Reflection on Leadership, Governance, and National Security in Nigeria By Prof. O. E. Bassey
As Nigeria commemorates another Democracy Day on June 12, the nation has a chance not only to celebrate democratic continuity but also to consider a vital question: Has democracy led to lasting peace, security, and national development?
Twenty-six years after Nigeria returned to democratic governance in 1999, the country has shown remarkable political strength.
Democratic institutions have survived many electoral cycles, civilian rule has continued, infrastructure has developed, and political participation has increased. However, a pressing question remains: Why does insecurity continue to threaten national stability after decades of democratic rule?
This question invites us to think more deeply about the link between democracy, governance, and security.
Since 1999, Nigeria has seen multiple presidential administrations, several electoral transitions, growing democratic participation, and major institutional changes. Still, ongoing issues like terrorism, banditry, kidnapping, communal conflicts, cultism, cybercrime, violent extremism, and organized crime show that democracy alone cannot ensure peace without effective governance.
The key issue for Nigeria is not whether democracy exists, but whether governance is delivering on its promises. The most significant security lesson from twenty-six years of democracy is clear: Governance must come before guns.
Democracy alone does not guarantee security. Many countries have democratic constitutions yet still face instability. Similarly, some nations have strong security institutions but experience weak governance. The connection between democracy and security is not automatic.
Democracy allows for participation, representation, accountability, inclusion, and citizen engagement. But when governance fails to turn these opportunities into real improvements in people’s lives, frustration, distrust, and instability can arise. When citizens feel excluded, neglected, or abandoned, insecurity thrives.
This explains why many security issues stem not only from criminal activity but also from governance failures. Unemployment, poverty, inequality, corruption, weak institutions, poor service delivery, and limited economic opportunities often create the conditions that allow insecurity to grow.
The lesson is straightforward: Many security problems start as governance issues before they become law-enforcement challenges.
The governance-security connection security is often seen as a matter of military force alone. Military operations, intelligence gathering, law enforcement, and security deployments are crucial to national security. However, they only address part of the problem. Sustainable security requires strong governance.
When governance is effective: Citizens trust institutions, Communities work with authorities, Economic opportunities grow, Social grievances diminish, Public confidence rises, and Conflicts decrease,
On the other hand, when governance is weak: Public trust falls, Criminal groups expand, Extremist ideas gain ground, Social tensions rise, Institutions lose credibility, and Security efforts react instead of prevent,
In essence, governance creates the environment where security can succeed or fail.
For many years, responses to insecurity have mostly focused on reacting after crises happen. Troops are mobilized after attacks.
Security operations increase after kidnappings. Interventions take place after violence escalates. While these responses are necessary, they are costly and often insufficient on their own. A proactive approach needs to address the root causes of insecurity from the start. This includes: Quality education, Youth employment, Economic inclusion, Community involvement, Social justice, Infrastructure development, Effective local governance, and Strengthening institutions. Security cannot be disconnected from development.
The safest communities are often those where governance is strong, opportunities are available, institutions function well, and citizens feel invested in their future.
One valuable outcome of democratic governance is trust. Trust enables cooperation between citizens and institutions. Trust encourages sharing information. Trust strengthens adherence to laws. Trust boosts resilience during crises.
Trust builds community. Unfortunately, trust cannot be demanded; it must be earned.
Citizens build trust when leaders show competence, integrity, fairness, transparency, and accountability.
Responsible leadership is the link between democratic institutions and governance results. A democratic system that loses the public’s trust weakens its own security.
National security is therefore not just about protecting land but also about maintaining confidence in institutions.
Another key lesson from Nigeria’s democratic path is the importance of strong institutions. National conversations often focus on individual leaders, overlooking the need for institutional development.
Strong institutions endure beyond specific administrations. Strong institutions ensure continuity. Strong institutions provide stability during leadership transitions.
Strong institutions lessen dependence on individual personalities.
The future of Nigerian democracy relies on strengthening institutions at all levels, including government agencies, security organizations, educational systems, judicial bodies, electoral commissions, and local governance mechanisms. Democracy becomes sustainable when institutions are stronger than individuals.
Security is not just the government’s job.
Communities, families, religious organizations, traditional leaders, civil society groups, educational institutions, and the private sector all play important roles.
Religious leaders shape values. Traditional institutions promote community unity.
Families nurture responsible citizens.
Schools teach character and civic duty.
Communities provide local insight and early warnings. Security thus needs a whole-of-society approach. The most effective security strategies are those that combine government efforts with community involvement.
Governance Before Guns principles does not undermine the role of security agencies. Instead, it recognizes that these agencies work best when governance systems function properly. Security institutions are essential for national stability. Yet, lasting peace occurs when governance addresses the conditions that lead to insecurity.
When governance is effective: Security becomes simpler. Communities become more resilient, Criminal recruitment decreases, and Public cooperation increases. But when governance fails: Security operations become ongoing, Threats multiply, and Public trust weakens,
Instability becomes a cycle. The lesson from twenty-six years of democracy is clear; Force may temporarily suppress threats, but
good governance reduces the conditions that create those threats.
The Next Phase of Nigeria’s Democracy
As Nigeria begins another chapter in its democratic journey, national focus must shift from political competition to governance outcomes. Citizens want results, safer communities, economic opportunities, justice, accountability, functioning institutions, and leadership that delivers.The next phase of democratic growth must emphasize governance results over political stories. The true measure of democracy lies not just in elections but in the quality of life it brings.
As Nigeria celebrates Democracy Day, the nation should take pride in the strength of its democratic institutions and the progress made since 1999. However, celebration should also include reflection. The security challenges facing the nation remind us that democracy alone is not enough. For democracy to fulfill its promise, it must be backed by responsible governance, strong institutions, accountable leadership, inclusive development, and citizen trust.
The lasting lesson from Nigeria’s democratic journey is that while guns may offer temporary safety, governance provides lasting stability. Security gained through force is fragile. Security upheld by good governance is lasting. Nigeria’s future will depend not only on how well we defend our country but also on how wisely we govern.
As Scripture says:
“Righteousness exalts a nation, but sin is a reproach to any people.” (Proverbs 14:34)
And:
“By wise counsel you will wage your own war, and in a multitude of counsellors there is safety.” (Proverbs 24:6)
As we celebrate June 12, may Nigeria continue to strengthen both its democracy and the governance systems needed to secure peace, stability, and prosperity for future generations.
Prof. Ofonime Emmanuel Bassey, PhD
Peace, Security & Governance Consultant | UN Peacekeeping Veteran | Professor of Peace Leadership & Conflict Resolution | Founder, NISSI Institute | Public Policy Advisor
Advising leaders and institutions across government, faith communities, education, civil society, and the private sector on peacebuilding, conflict prevention, and strategic security leadership.
As a Public Theologian, he provides ethical, moral, and values-based perspectives in leadership, governance, and societal development, ensuring that systems of peace are both effective and principled.
Through the NISSI Institute for Leadership, Peace and Security, he trains leaders, institutions, and communities in peacebuilding, responsible leadership, and security awareness.
+2347065828892
www.nissiinstitute.net









