THE COURTROOM DOOR IS STILL CLOSED: NIGERIA HOLDS ITS BREATH

Aare Amerijoye DOT.B

I. THIS EVENING, NIGERIA GETS ITS ANSWER

Some days are just days. This is not one of them.

At exactly 4 o’clock this evening, in a courtroom in Abuja, five judges will rise, sit, and read a judgment that will either save Nigerian democracy or bury it. Not weaken it. Not wound it. Bury it , with a judicial shovel, in broad daylight, dressed in the language of the law.

There will be no drums. No announcement. Just five robed figures, a file, and a decision that 220 million Nigerians will feel in their bones long after the words have faded from the page.

We have been here before. We know this smell.

II. THE CRIME ON THE TABLE

This is not complicated. Strip away the legal Latin, the procedural fog, the manufactured confusion ,and what remains is this:

INEC swore an affidavit. INEC violated that affidavit. On 31st March 2026, the electoral commission delisted the David Mark-led ADC National Working Committee from its portal, misapplying the status quo ante to the portal upload date of 9th September 2025 , rather than the operative NEC ratification of 29th July 2025. The doctrine prohibiting simultaneous approbation and reprobation is not exotic jurisprudence. It is constitutional common sense: you cannot swear a thing and then do the opposite and call it lawful.

That is the case before the Supreme Court today. INEC’s own documents condemn INEC. INEC’s own sworn words indict INEC. The answer is in the file. The file was written by the defendant.

And yet Nigeria waits. Because three years of Tinubu’s Nigeria have taught a brutal lesson: the law on the page and the law in the courtroom are not the same country.

III. WHAT IS REALLY ON TRIAL

Do not be deceived by the legal packaging. What is on trial this evening is not a party dispute. It is the survival of the most formidable democratic opposition Nigeria has assembled since MKO Abiola united this nation in 1993.

Atiku Abubakar. Peter Obi. Rabiu Kwankwaso. Rotimi Amaechi. Nasir El-Rufai. Rauf Aregbesola. David Mark. These names, on one platform, represent 14.5 million Nigerians who voted against Tinubu in 2023 ,nearly twice his total. This is not a coalition assembled by politicians. It is a coalition assembled by suffering. By petrol skyrocketed prices and queues and collapsed naira and broken promises and the particular fury of citizens who were cheated and know it and have decided, with cold finality, that 2027 is the reckoning.

Tinubu cannot beat this coalition. Not on a level field. Not with honest ballots. His strategists have run the numbers. The numbers do not lie. And so the field must be tilted before the game begins. The coalition must be dismembered before it can march. The platform must be destroyed before it can carry its passengers to the polls.

That is what the manufactured ADC crisis is. That is what INEC’s institutional perjury is. This is political assassination in legal costume and the Supreme Court is being asked today to either arrest the assassin or hand him a fresh weapon.

IV. FIVE NAMES. ONE QUESTION.

Justice Mohammed Garba. Four colleagues. The full moral weight of Nigerian democratic history resting on their shoulders this afternoon.

We watched 2023. We watched that Supreme Court look at a result that shamed arithmetic and crown it with constitutional blessing. We have not forgotten. We will never forget. We approach this afternoon without innocence.

But even compromised institutions contain human beings. And human beings, at moments of naked historical clarity, sometimes remember that their oath is not decoration. That the judgment they write today will be read long after the government that pressured them is dust. That history does not grade on a curve , it simply records who did what, and when, and what it cost the people.

Justice Garba and his colleagues know exactly what is in that file. The affidavit. The violation. The date deliberately misapplied. The law is not unclear. The facts are not disputed. The only question ,the only question , is whether knowing is enough to produce justice in a country where justice has been systematically repriced beyond the reach of the people it was built to serve.

V. THE REAL BENCH

The petrol hawker in Maiduguri paying three times what fuel should cost ,she is in that courtroom. The Onitsha trader watching the naira dissolve and his business collapse , he is in that courtroom. The Kano voter who chose a different Nigeria in 2023 and watched his choice overruled by a court with other arrangements , he is in that room with both fists clenched and thirty years of democratic betrayal in his eyes.

The judgment will be read to lawyers in silk. But it will be received by a nation.

And that nation is the final court. Its verdict requires no judges. It requires only a ballot and a free one and the weight of 14.5 million people who have made up their minds.

Whatever this Supreme Court decides today, The Narrative Force will tell Nigeria exactly what it means , in precise, documented, unsparing language , in a second dispatch before this day is done.

The door is closed. The nation waits.

2027 does not wait.

Aare Amerijoye DOT.B
Director General,
The Narrative Force, thenarrativeforce.org
30 April 2026

The Narrative Force — Prosecuting Truth in the Public Interest

Aare Amerijoye Donald Olalekan Temitope Bowofade (DOT.B) is a Nigerian political strategist, public intellectual, and writer. He serves as the Director-General of The Narrative Force (TNF), a strategic communication and political-education organisation committed to shaping ideas, narratives, and democratic consciousness in Nigeria. An indigene of Ekiti State, he was born in Osogbo, then Oyo State, now Osun State, and currently resides in Ekiti State. His political and civic engagement spans several decades. In the 1990s, he was actively involved in Nigeria’s human-rights and pro-democracy struggles, participating in organisations such as Human Rights Africa and the Nigerianity Movement among many others, where he worked under the leadership of Dr. Tunji Abayomi during the nation’s fight for democratic restoration. Between 2000 and 2002, he served as Assistant Organising Secretary of Ekiti Progressives and the Femi Falana Front, under Barrister Femi Falana (SAN), playing a key role in grassroots mobilisation, civic education, and progressive political advocacy. He has since served in government and party politics in various capacities, including Senior Special Assistant to the Ekiti State Governor on Political Matters and Inter-Party Relations, Secretary to the Local Government, and Special Assistant on Youth Mobilisation and Strategy. At the national level, he has been a member of various nationally constituted party and electoral committees, including the PDP Presidential Campaign Council Security Committee (2022) and the Ondo State 2024 election committee. Currently, he is a member of the African Democratic Congress (ADC) and serves as Secretary of the Ekiti State ADC Strategic Committee, where he plays a central role in party structuring, strategy, and grassroots coordination. Aare Amerijoye writes extensively on governance, leadership ethics, party politics, and national renewal. His essays and commentaries have been published in Nigerian Tribune, Punch, The Guardian, THISDAY, TheCable, and leading digital platforms. His work blends philosophical depth with strategic clarity, advancing principled politics anchored on truth, justice, and moral courage.

Leave a Reply

Your email address will not be published. Required fields are marked *

Recent News

Trending News

Editor's Picks

THE ANATOMY OF A FRIGHTENED PROPAGANDIST

A REPLY TO ALAYANDE ADENIYI SUNDAY Aare Amerijoye DOT.B THERE ARE MOMENTS IN THE LIFE OF A NATION when the quality of its political discourse sinks so catastrophically low that silence becomes complicity. The piece authored by one Alayande Adeniyi Sunday against the presidential candidacy of Atiku Abubakar is one such moment. It is not...

THE REPUBLIC OF RANSOM

How Nigeria Was Surrendered To The Gun, And Why 16 January 2027 Is The Day We Take It Back Aare Amerijoye DOT.B There is a sound that now defines the Nigeria of Bola Ahmed Tinubu. It is not the hum of factories. It is not the laughter of children walking to school. It is the...

Must Read

©2026. The Narrative Force. All Rights Reserved