From my personal observation and experience, darkness can never extinguish light; rather, even the faintest ray of light dispels the deepest darkness.
Likewise, truth ultimately triumphs because falsehood cannot alter objective reality. Just as darkness is merely the absence of light, falsehood is simply the absence of truth.
This philosophical conviction provides an appropriate introduction to the life and public journey of Omoyele Sowore—a fearless activist whose name has become synonymous with uncompromising advocacy for good governance, structural reform, and democratic accountability in Nigeria.
As founder of Sahara Reporters, established in New York, Sowore has devoted much of his adult life to exposing corruption, confronting abuse of power, and championing the ideals of justice, press freedom, and responsible governance. In doing so, he sacrificed academic ambitions, career opportunities, family comfort, and, repeatedly, his personal liberty in pursuit of what he believes is a better Nigeria.
His reputation as a radical democrat was further cemented through the #RevolutionNow movement, which sought to awaken citizens—particularly young Nigerians—to demand a fundamental restructuring of governance and public accountability.
Rather than remaining solely an activist, he also chose to engage the democratic process directly by contesting the Nigerian presidency under the African Action Congress (AAC) in both the 2019 and 2023 elections.
His campaigns consistently focused on youth empowerment, anti-corruption, institutional reforms, and national restructuring.Such unwavering commitment has come at enormous personal cost.
From his days as a student union activist at the University of Lagos to his subsequent arrests, prolonged detentions, prosecutions, and legal battles, Sowore has repeatedly confronted the coercive powers of the Nigerian state. Yet, despite these ordeals, he remains one of the country’s most resilient symbols of resistance.Unsurprisingly, Sowore evokes sharply divided opinions. Admirers regard him as an incorruptible patriot and a catalyst for a revolution of values capable of transforming Nigeria’s political culture. Critics, on the other hand, view his style of activism as unnecessarily confrontational and politically abrasive.
Such polarisation is hardly unusual in history, as many reformers who challenged entrenched systems were initially resisted before their ideas received broader consideration.History equally teaches that revolutions are rarely the product of one individual.
They emerge when prolonged economic hardship, widening inequality, political exclusion, institutional corruption, and the spread of transformative ideas converge to produce a collective demand for change.
The Philippine Revolution of 1896, for instance, was triggered by the discovery of the Katipunan, yet it was fundamentally the culmination of decades of growing national consciousness and accumulated grievances. Major historical transformations are therefore seldom spontaneous; they arise from long-standing structural tensions.
However, while historical parallels may provide useful insights, Nigeria’s greatest challenge lies elsewhere. Too often, our national discourse is dominated by comparisons with Western democracies or other foreign political systems. Such comparisons, though intellectually attractive, frequently ignore Nigeria’s unique historical evolution, cultural diversity, and social realities.
In my considered opinion, meaningful and sustainable national progress will remain elusive until Nigerians accept that our solutions must emerge principally from our own realities rather than from inherited colonial templates or borrowed institutional models. The lingering tendency to measure ourselves against foreign political systems reflects a subtle continuation of colonial and neo-colonial thinking.
The current debates surrounding governance in Britain and the United States—including disagreements over foreign policy, party leadership, and institutional accountability—illustrate that every nation confronts its own peculiar political contradictions.
Rather than imitating external systems wholesale, Nigeria should focus on understanding its own peculiarities and designing institutions capable of addressing them effectively. As an engineer would readily appreciate, every successful system is built upon correct assumptions and appropriate boundary conditions. Once these foundational assumptions are flawed, the resulting system will inevitably malfunction.
In engineering terms, filling a diesel engine with petrol guarantees failure regardless of the quality of the vehicle itself. Nigeria’s political experience often resembles such a system—institutions transplanted without sufficient adaptation to our unique national realities.The deeper crisis confronting Nigeria is therefore not merely constitutional or political; it is fundamentally one of values, orientation, civic education, and national consciousness.
A significant proportion of our population has been shaped by historical grievances, distorted political expectations, and conflicting social narratives. Unsurprisingly, governments at every level often become reflections of these underlying societal conditions.
Our intellectuals, professionals, and policymakers should therefore devote less energy to debating which foreign political model Nigeria ought to copy and considerably more effort towards designing governance structures rooted in our own history, cultures, aspirations, and developmental needs.
As the Yoruba wisely observe: “Ọmọ ewurẹ yàtọ̀ sí ọmọ ajá; bẹ́ẹ̀ ni ọmọ ajá yàtọ̀ sí ọmọ ẹkùn.”Every creature possesses its own unique nature; consequently, every society requires institutions designed for its own peculiar circumstances.Against this backdrop, the Federal Government equally bears a significant responsibility.
To fully realise the aspirations of the Renewed Hope Agenda, governance must evolve beyond abstract macroeconomic theories into a model that is locally responsive, socially compassionate, and people-centred. Policies must increasingly reflect the daily realities of ordinary Nigerians and bridge the widening gulf between political leadership and the citizens they govern.
Ultimately, Nigeria’s future will not be secured merely through changing governments or replacing political actors. What is urgently required is a genuine revolution of values—one founded upon integrity, justice, accountability, competence, patriotism, and national purpose.
Whether one agrees with Omoyele Sowore’s methods or not, his lifelong advocacy compels Nigerians to confront difficult but necessary questions about governance, justice, citizenship, and the moral foundations of the state. Those questions deserve serious national reflection.
The destiny of Nigeria will ultimately be determined not by personalities but by our collective willingness to build institutions that reflect our realities, inspire public confidence, uphold justice, and serve the common good. Only then can we lay the foundations for a stable, prosperous, and truly democratic nation.


