By Bello Abdullahi
NEWSDAILYNIGERIA: The recent order by a United States District Court compelling the FBI and the Drug Enforcement Administration to release records linked to President Bola Ahmed Tinubu has triggered predictable reactions in Nigeria, outrage from supporters, triumphalism from critics, and confusion among the wider public. Yet beyond the noise lies a more serious national question that deserves calm reflection.
This is not, first and foremost, a legal drama. It is a credibility test, for leadership, institutions, and our collective understanding of accountability.
What the Court Order Is, and What It Is Not
Let us be clear. The U.S. court did not convict the Nigerian president of any crime. There is no indictment, no trial, and no finding of guilt. What exists are historical law-enforcement records tied to investigations from the early 1990s, including documentation related to an asset forfeiture case. These are investigative materials, not judicial verdicts.
This distinction matters. Democracies are damaged when facts are exaggerated, just as they are weakened when uncomfortable truths are buried.
However, clarity on the legal limits of this case should not blind us to its symbolic and moral implications.
The Real Embarrassment Is Not Legal, It Is Institutional
The discomfort Nigerians feel is not because a foreign court exists, but because a foreign court is now doing what Nigerian institutions never demanded forcefully: transparency at the highest level of power.
In functioning democracies, leadership credibility is settled long before office is assumed. Vetting is rigorous. Questions are answered early. Shadows are addressed decisively. The persistence of unresolved controversies decades later points not to foreign hostility, but to domestic institutional weakness.
A country serious about integrity does not wait for another jurisdiction to ask hard questions on its behalf.
Credibility, Not Criminality, Is the Core Issue
Public leadership is not judged only by what is illegal. It is judged by what is credible. Even in the absence of criminal guilt, unresolved questions, especially those involving narcotics investigations, asset forfeiture, or prolonged secrecy, inevitably weaken moral authority.
This matters because Nigeria routinely invokes anti-corruption rhetoric, discipline, and sacrifice from ordinary citizens. When transparency appears selective, trust erodes. And when trust erodes, governance becomes coercive rather than consensual.
Global Optics and the Cost of Uncertainty
Nigeria does not operate in isolation. Investors, diplomats, and international partners watch governance signals closely. In global perception, allegations, even unproven, linger longer than official denials. Reputational fog is costly, and it cannot be wished away with press statements.
Even if the released records contain nothing explosive, the episode itself freezes uncertainty in the international imagination. That is the price of opacity.
This Is Bigger Than One Man
It would be intellectually lazy to reduce this moment to partisan warfare. This is not merely about President Tinubu. It is about a political culture that treats power as an entitlement rather than a trust, and sees scrutiny as hostility rather than responsibility.
Strong nations are not those whose leaders are flawless, but those whose institutions are fearless.
The Only Mature Response
Nigeria does not need hysteria, nor does it need blind loyalty. What it needs is a principled stance:
If transparency clears the president, the nation benefits.
If transparency raises questions, accountability strengthens the republic.
Either way, truth is not the enemy of stability. Suppression is.
The real danger is not what may be found in old files, but what we signal to future leaders when we insist that power should be shielded from inquiry.
When a nation grows afraid of the truth, it begins to shrink morally.
And no country can build a just future on that foundation.
Bello Abdullahi
Public Affairs Commentator & Social Critic
#GaskiyaAlliance — Truth. Accountability . Civic Courage .

