TheInvestigator will continue to ask the hard questions, because democracy demands nothing less.
By TheInvestigator Editorial Board
As the curtains draw on 2025, Nigeria stands at a familiar but uncomfortable crossroads – one defined by grand spectacles, loud promises, and persistent governance deficits. From colourful carnivals to ribbon-cutting ceremonies, the country has once again demonstrated its unmatched ability to celebrate. Yet beneath the drums, costumes, and official communiqués lies an unresolved question that continues to define our national journey: where is accountability?
In Cross River State and beyond, 2025 was a year of contrasts. Public events, such as Carnival Calabar, project Nigeria’s culture, tourism, and heritage to the world, reinforcing the country’s soft power and creative economy. However, while the state showcased “Traces of Time,” many communities continued to grapple with unfulfilled budgets, abandoned projects, unsafe roads, water scarcity, and inadequate service delivery. Celebration, without accountability, risks becoming a distraction rather than a development tool.
Across the country, economic hardship remained the lived reality for millions. Inflation eroded household incomes, youth unemployment deepened frustration, and insecurity, whether through kidnapping, trafficking, or unchecked abuses at roadblocks, continued to test citizens’ faith in the state. While authorities repeatedly assured Nigerians of reforms, transparency around public spending, security operations, and policy outcomes remained insufficient.
One of the most troubling patterns of 2025 was the shrinking civic space. Journalists, activists, and ordinary citizens asking legitimate questions increasingly faced intimidation, bureaucratic roadblocks, or silence. Yet democracy does not thrive on silence; it survives on scrutiny. A government confident in its mandate should welcome questions, not fear them.
At TheInvestigator, we maintained a clear editorial position throughout 2025: accountability is not opposition, and transparency is not sabotage. Investigative journalism is not an enemy of the state; it is a partner in nation-building. When citizens know how resources are allocated, how security agencies operate, and how decisions are made, trust grows. When information is hidden, suspicion flourishes.
There were, however, signs of hope. Community-led accountability efforts, youth-driven digital advocacy, public interest litigation, and courageous whistleblowing reminded us that citizens are not powerless. Civil society organisations, local journalists, and reform-minded public officials demonstrated that integrity is still possible within Nigeria’s complex system.
As 2026 begins, Nigeria must shift its focus from performance to proof. Governments at all levels must publish clear data, open their processes, respect human rights, and measure success not by applause but by impact. Security agencies must operate within the law. Public funds must serve the public good. And leaders must remember that power is held in trust, not ownership.
Last year, our newsroom published 23 hardcore investigations holding power to account; this year, we hope to do stronger accountability stories that cut through official narratives and centred the lived realities of citizens.
History will not remember how loudly we were celebrated, but how honestly we governed.
The choice before Nigeria is simple but urgent: continue perfecting the art of spectacle, or finally commit to the discipline of accountability. The future depends on which path we take.
TheInvestigator will continue to ask the hard questions, because democracy demands nothing less.
