United States Ambassador to Nigeria, Mary Leonard, has said that the eyes of the world will be on Nigeria this year and early next year, as the country prepares to choose a new president and transition to a new government, saying the Nigerian Guild of Editors, NGE and members of civil society group has a role and responsibility in promoting democracy.

The Ambassador who spoke yesterday at a Town Hall Meeting organised by the NGE, with support from US Embassy in Nigeria, noted that Nigeria’s commitment to democracy and opposition to authoritarianism remains sound.
Your leaders have been consistent in calling for the respect of presidential term limits, for example, and they have been quick to condemn military coups in West Africa and the rest of the continent,” she added.
However, the Ambassador stated that beyond public pledges supporting freedom and democracy, the editors and members of the civil society groups have a responsibility to delve deeper into underlying factors that erode faith in democracy.
She explained that patronage politics, corruption, inequality, and the failure of many democratic governments to deliver for their citizens fuel public and media doubts about the democratic model, causing them to lose hope and cynically accept the status quo as inevitable and normal.
According to her, “One way to restore public confidence in democracy is through free and fair elections. The eyes of the world will therefore be on Nigeria this year and early next year as you prepare to choose a new president and transition to a new government.
“We were pleased that last week President Muhammadu Buhari signed Nigeria’s long-awaited Electoral Act Amendment Bill into law, ensuring adoption of a number of long sought-after reforms to the electoral process, including the electronic transmission of election results from polling places.
“Editors, like yourselves, are in fact critical gatekeepers. Your actions and decisions level the playing field. You determine whose voices are heard and what news topics receive in-depth coverage. In a digital age, when the 24/7 news cycle is unrelenting and often bewildering, you help weed out the trivial to focus on the essential”.
While tasking editors on their professional duty, Ambassador Leonard explained that access to accurate – unbiased information is critical to any democracy in the world.
“There is a significant positive multiplier effect whenever journalists do the right thing, or take a well-documented, pioneering approach. When free and independent media publish previously unknown facts, write principled editorials, or take a stand to defend and protect other courageous journalists, the public takes note and trust is built and re-built”, she emphasised.
