November 18, 2025

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Julius-Maada-Bio

The Economic Community of West African States has warned that a breakdown of democratic governance in Nigeria would trigger widespread democratic collapse across the entire West African region.

ECOWAS Commission President, Omar Touray, issued the warning on Monday in Abuja during the launch of the โ€œRegional Partnership for Democracy,โ€ a new initiative aimed at reversing the continentโ€™s rising democratic setbacks. Represented by the Commissioner for Political Affairs, Peace and Security, Ambassador Abdel-Fatau Musah, Touray said democracy in the region is under intense pressure.

Touray commended Nigeria, Ghana, Senegal and Cabo Verde for sustaining multiparty democracy, stressing that the regionโ€™s stability depends heavily on Nigeriaโ€™s democratic strength. โ€œMake no mistake, if democracy falters in Nigeria, democracy will collapse everywhere else in the entire West African region,โ€ he said.

Musah urged West African countries to revisit the standard four-year presidential term, describing it as too short for leaders to initiate and complete meaningful developmental programmes. He warned that the region faces severe threats including unconstitutional changes of government, judicial manipulation and the deliberate exclusion of opposition parties.

He noted that the RPD programmeโ€”launched by Nigeria in partnership with the United Nations Development Programme and the Federal Governmentโ€”comes at a critical moment when the social contract between citizens and the state is weakening. According to him, democracy in the region has failed to deliver basic services, infrastructure, and security, leading to public frustration.

Musah identified rising military coups, the entrenchment of incumbents, global geopolitical tension, terrorism, and โ€œAI-powered misinformationโ€ as factors deepening democratic vulnerability. He cautioned that relying solely on regime security without development amounts to building โ€œan edifice on sandy foundations.โ€

Nigeriaโ€™s Minister of Foreign Affairs, Yusuf Tuggar, said the RPD marks โ€œa new chapterโ€ for Africaโ€™s democratic evolution, noting that despite existing continental mechanisms, political instability persists due to political violence, low citizen participation, administrative impunity and weakened judicial and media institutions.

He argued that Africaโ€™s governance problems stem partly from the uncritical adoption of foreign political models that ignore the continentโ€™s cultural and historical realities. Tuggar described the RPD as an African-grounded alternative built on local values and informed by global best practices.

He added that the new initiative is more than a policy tool, calling it โ€œPresident Bola Tinubuโ€™s contribution and Nigeriaโ€™s gift to the strengthening and flourishing of democracy in Africa.โ€

The RPD aims to strengthen electoral bodies, improve early-warning systems for unconstitutional power transitions, enhance youth participation, counter disinformation, and promote long-term political stability across the region.

UNDP Resident Representative, Elsie Attafuah, praised Nigeria for spearheading the initiative, calling the partnership a โ€œcompact of values.โ€ She highlighted four key pillars: strengthening institutions and accountability; ensuring inclusive participation; promoting credible elections; and deepening regional cooperation. According to her, the initiative is designed to scale existing democratic successes and make democracy a โ€œlived realityโ€ for Africans.

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