Africa’s Largest Economy at a Crossroads: Why Nigeria, ECOWAS and the African Union Must Focus on Security Before Politics

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                                                                      Africa’s Largest Economy at a Crossroads: Why Nigeria, ECOWAS and the African Union Must Focus on Security Before Politics
As Nigeria confronts mounting security challenges and the continued loss of military personnel, regional institutions and national leaders must prioritize stability, security cooperation, and economic resilience over political distractions that risk diverting attention from the continent’s most pressing threats.
Nigeria stands today at a defining moment not only for its own future but for that of West Africa and the African continent. As Africa’s largest economy and most populous democracy, Nigeria’s stability is inseparable from regional prosperity, investor confidence, democratic governance, and collective security across the Economic Community of West African States (ECOWAS) and the African Union (AU).
When Nigeria succeeds, West Africa advances. When Nigeria struggles, the consequences are felt far beyond its borders.
It is against this backdrop that recent efforts by the Nigerian Senate to summon former NNPC Group Managing Director, Mele Kyari, have generated intense public debate. While accountability and transparency remain essential pillars of democratic governance, many Nigerians and regional observers are increasingly asking whether the nation’s political leadership is focusing its attention on the challenges that matter most at this critical time.
Across the country, insecurity continues to threaten lives, livelihoods, and national development. From insurgent activities in the North-East to banditry in the North-West, communal clashes in the Middle Belt, and criminal networks operating across various regions, millions of Nigerians continue to live under the shadow of uncertainty.
Even more alarming is the continued sacrifice of Nigeria’s military personnel. The deaths of senior officers, commanders, and courageous soldiers in active operations serve as a painful reminder that the country remains engaged in an ongoing battle for peace and stability. These are not merely statistics; they are fathers, mothers, sons, daughters, and patriots who have paid the ultimate price in service to their nation.
In such circumstances, many citizens believe that national attention should be directed toward strengthening security architecture, improving intelligence gathering, enhancing military welfare, modernizing defense capabilities, and supporting the men and women risking their lives to protect the nation.
This is not an argument against accountability. No democratic society can thrive without transparency and oversight. Public officials must always remain accountable to the people and the institutions of the state. However, accountability must not become a substitute for governance, nor should it overshadow urgent national priorities.
The debate surrounding Mele Kyari deserves a balanced and objective perspective. During his tenure as Group Managing Director of the Nigerian National Petroleum Corporation and later as Group Chief Executive Officer of NNPC Limited, Nigeria’s petroleum industry underwent one of the most challenging periods in its history.
Kyari’s administration navigated the unprecedented global economic disruptions caused by the COVID-19 pandemic, fluctuating crude oil prices, geopolitical uncertainties, and a rapidly changing global energy landscape. Under his leadership, significant reforms were introduced to improve operational efficiency, attract investment, increase transparency, and facilitate the implementation of key provisions of the Petroleum Industry Act.
Like every public servant, his record may be subject to scrutiny and evaluation. However, such assessments should be conducted through established legal and institutional processes, guided by evidence and due process rather than political optics.
The greater challenge before Nigeria today is not the legacy of a former public official; it is the urgent need to secure lives, protect communities, and restore public confidence in the state’s capacity to guarantee safety and stability.
The Nigerian Senate possesses both the constitutional authority and moral responsibility to lead conversations that address the nation’s most pressing concerns. Nigerians expect lawmakers to demand answers about security failures, evaluate defense strategies, strengthen oversight of security spending, and champion reforms capable of producing measurable results.
Beyond Nigeria, ECOWAS and the African Union must also recognize that insecurity within Africa’s largest economy carries regional implications. Terrorism, arms trafficking, organized crime, and cross-border insecurity do not respect national boundaries. A weakened Nigeria inevitably affects the wider West African region.
This is why stronger cooperation between Nigeria, ECOWAS, and the African Union is more important than ever. Regional intelligence sharing, joint security operations, economic resilience initiatives, and coordinated responses to emerging threats must become central pillars of Africa’s collective security framework.
Across the continent, successful nations have demonstrated that progress is achieved when leaders remain focused on solving present challenges while building stronger institutions for the future. Political accountability and national security should complement one another not compete for attention.
As Africa watches its largest democracy navigate this critical period, there is a growing expectation that leaders will rise above partisan distractions and focus on the issues that directly affect ordinary citizens. Security remains the foundation upon which economic growth, foreign investment, food security, education, healthcare, and social development depend.
The question before Nigeria’s leaders is therefore not whether accountability should exist it must. The real question is whether the pursuit of past controversies should overshadow the urgent responsibility of addressing present dangers.
History rarely remembers leaders for the investigations they launched. It remembers them for the crises they solved, the lives they protected, and the legacy of stability they left behind.
For Nigeria, for ECOWAS, and for the African Union, the path forward is clear. Security must come first. Stability must remain the priority. Politics can wait.
The future of Africa’s largest economy and the stability of an entire region may depend on it.

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