JOINT CIVIL SOCIETY STATEMENT ON THE STATE OF THE NIGERIAN NATION

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Auwal Musa

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Apr 7, 2026, 9:45:15 AM (yesterday) Apr 7
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JOINT CIVIL SOCIETY STATEMENT ON THE STATE OF THE NIGERIAN NATION

A Call to Action by Nigerian Civil Society Organisations

Nigeria is on the brink of collapse. We, the undersigned Civil Society Organizations (CSOs), acting as non-partisan advocates for democracy, human rights, and good governance, issue this urgent plea for responsible leadership and collective action to save our nation from escalating insecurity, rising poverty, and moral decay in public life.

Across the country, citizens count losses while politicians trade rhetoric. In Zamfara, displaced farmers now live on crumbs in squalid camps. In Abuja, a teacher spends half her income on transportation. In Lagos, families skip meals to pay rent. Yet, federal, state, and local governments continue to enjoy record revenues and allocations.

Politics has become Nigeria’s biggest business, even as the country suffers. Removing subsidies, floating the naira, and increasing public debt have significantly boosted government revenue. In just the last two years, federal budgets have surpassed 100 trillion, exceeding the total of all budgets from 1999 to 2017. Nigerians see the numbers, but nothing has improved. Public services falter, inequality grows, and ordinary citizens become poorer while politicians get richer from larger allocations. 

 

KEY AREAS OF CONCERN

1. INSECURITY AND VIOLENCE

Killings, abductions, and displacement have become commonplace. Entire communities across the North and Middle Belt are deserted. Security cooperation remains weak, and political will appears absent.

2. BANDITRY AND FOOD COLLAPSE

Rural banditry has devastated livelihoods, disrupted food supplies, and caused inflation to rise above 15%. Hunger looms over millions of homes while farms lie abandoned in fear.

3. KIDNAPPING EPIDEMIC

From schoolchildren in Sokoto to commuters in Abuja, kidnapping has become a nationwide industry. Paying ransom has replaced access to safety.

4. SHRINKING CIVIC SPACE

Journalists face harassment, activists face threats, and peaceful protesters are silenced. A democracy that fears its citizens is already in decline.

 

5. CORRUPTION AND GOVERNANCE BREAKDOWN

Entrenched graft continues to drain public resources. Citizens hear about trillion-naira budgets, yet roads stay impassable, hospitals are empty, and schools are in disrepair. Accountability has been replaced by excuses.

6. ECONOMIC HARDSHIP AND INEQUALITY

Despite increasing government revenue, the economy still harms the poor. Inflation, unemployment, and currency instability have worsened inequality. Poverty has become Nigeria’s most noticeable institution.

7. THREATS TO DEMOCRACY AND 2027 ELECTIONS

Politicians focus on succession battles while citizens struggle for survival. The manipulation of political systems and the erosion of trust threaten Nigeria’s multiparty democracy and future stability. The inability to curb the influx of illicit funds into the political space.

8. ERODED JUDICIAL CREDIBILITY

Justice delayed or influenced is justice denied. Political interference in courts has eroded the judiciary's former trust.

OUR DEMANDS

Nigerians deserve relief, justice, and dignity, not just slogans. We call for urgent action from the government and its institutions.

1.       Deliver economic justice: convert record revenues into tangible improvements: social protection, job creation, accessible healthcare, and affordable food.

2.     Restore security and humanity: coordinate national security efforts, enhance intelligence capabilities, and make community protection a clear, measurable priority.

3.    End corruption without exception: prosecute offenders swiftly, disclose public spending transparently, and restore ethics in governance.

4.     Defend democracy from being hijacked: end the politicization of institutions, establish political finance integrity mechanisms, ensure electoral reforms before 2027, and maintain internal party democracy.

5.     Uphold rights and freedoms: respect dissent, protect journalists and activists, and defend civic space from intimidation.

6.    Urgently rebuild trust in the judiciary: guarantee independence, deliver timely judgments, and make justice accessible to all citizens.

A Final Word

Nigerians are paying the price of political excesses. Leadership cannot continue politicking while the nation bleeds.

Every Naira of public money must be felt in the life of the ordinary citizen; anything less is betrayal.

We stand with every Nigerian facing hunger, insecurity, and hopelessness.

We stand for justice, equity, and good governance.

The time for excuses is over; Nigeria must choose humanity over politics.

 

 Signed:

1.        21st Century Community Empowerment for Youth Initiative

2.      ActionAid Nigeria

3.     Accountability Lab, Nigeria

4.      Abuja School of Social and Political Thought

5.     Africa Network for Environment and Economic Justice (ANEEJ)

6.     African Centre for Leadership, Strategy & Development (Centre LSD)

7.      African Centre for Media & Information Literacy (AFRICMIL)

8.     Africa Law Foundation 

9.     Alliance on Surviving COVID 19 and Beyond (AACAB)

10.   Amnesty International Nigeria

11.     Borno Coalition for Democracy and Progress (BOCODEP)

12.   BudgIT Foundation

13.   Center for Fiscal Transparency and Public Integrity

14.   Centre for Democracy and Development (CDD)

15.   Centre for Democratic Research and Training (CRDDERT)

16.   Centre for Information Technology and Development (CITAD)

17.    Centre for Journalism Innovation and Development (CJID)

18,   Centre for Transparency Advocacy

19.     Centre for Social Justice

20. Civil Society Legislative Advocacy Centre (CISLAC)

21.   Conscience for Human Rights and Conflict Resolution (CHRCR)

22. Corporate Accountability and Public Participation Africa (CAPPA)

23. Emma Ezeazu Centre for Good Governance and Accountability24.

24. #FixPolitics

25. Girl Child Concern (GCC)

26. Global Rights

27.Good Governance Team

30. Health of Mother Earth Foundation (HOMEF)

31.    Human and Environmental Development Agenda (HEDA Resource Centre)

32.     Koyenum Immalah Foundation

33.     Media Rights Agenda

34.      Mothers and Marginalized Advocacy Centre (MAMA Centre)

35 .       Organization for Community Civic Engagement (OCCEN)

36.       Partners West Africa Nigeria

37.      Peering Advocacy and Advancement Center in Africa (PAACA)

38.     PRAWA International  

39.   Procurement Observation and Advocacy Initiative

40.    Resource Centre for Human Rights and Civic Education (CHRICED)

41. RULAAC - Rule of Law and Accountability Advocacy Centre

42.   Say NO Campaign – Nigeria

43. Social Action

44. Socio-Economic Rights and Accountability Project (SERAP)

45. Socio-Economic Research and Development Centre (SERDEC)

46.  State of the Union (SOTU)

47. Tax Justice and Governance Platform

48. Transition Monitoring Group (TMG)

49.  WACSI NODE Nigeria

50.   Women in Media Communication Initiative (WIM)

51. Yiaga Africa 

52.Zero Corruption Coalition (ZCC)




--


Head of Transparency International (Nigeria)

Amnesty International (Nigeria)Trustee Chairman and standing Representative. 

Chairman, Transition Monitoring Group(TMG)

Website: www.cislacnigeria.net

SKYPE: rafsanjanikano

Global Office:

Jay Suites, 1441 Broadway, 5th Floor, New York NY10018, USA. phone: +1202651142


CISLAC HAS UN ECOSOC CONSULTATIVE STATUS




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