A coalition of civil society organisations, labour unions, youth groups, and prominent activists led by human rights lawyer Femi Falana and rapper-activist Folarin Falana, known as Falz, took to the streets in multiple cities on Friday, June 12, 2026, for nationwide protests on Democracy Day, demanding urgent government action on insecurity, the release of abducted Nigerians, and an end to what they described as anti-poor economic policies.
The coalition, which included the Committee for the Defence of Human Rights, the Joint Action Front, the Youth Rights Campaign, and several other organisations, declared that Nigerians had little to celebrate on Democracy Day as communities across the country continued to grapple with terrorism, banditry, kidnapping, and a deepening cost of living crisis. The protest marches were held in Lagos, Abuja, Port Harcourt, Kano, and several other cities.
In a joint statement, the organisers accused the federal government of failing to adequately protect the lives and livelihoods of Nigerians. ‘Innocent Nigerians are being killed, abducted, displaced and traumatised while government responses have remained largely inadequate and ineffective,’ the coalition declared, calling for immediate and concrete actions to secure the release of all Nigerians currently held captive in Oyo, Borno, Katsina, Kwara, Ekiti, Zamfara, Kaduna, and Niger States.
Coalition Blames Anti-Poor Policies
Beyond insecurity, the coalition also blamed the worsening economic conditions on what it described as anti-poor policies including fuel subsidy removal, repeated fuel price increases, currency devaluation, and rising electricity tariffs. The group said the combination of insecurity and economic hardship had pushed millions of Nigerians into deeper poverty and demanded a reversal of policies it argued were benefiting the wealthy at the expense of the poor.
Femi Falana, who had earlier warned against politicising the Oyo school abduction, drew a direct connection between the June 12 democratic struggle and the current demand for government accountability. He expressed disappointment that those who are the direct beneficiaries of past democratic struggles appeared not committed to ensuring electoral integrity or providing citizens with the dividends of democracy. ‘If you want democracy at the elections next year, you must ensure that kidnapping and abduction of Nigerians, including children, stops,’ Falana said.
However, the Presidency described the protests as the legitimate exercise of democratic rights but disputed the characterisation of the government’s reform record as a failure. Officials insisted that the administration was making measurable progress and called on protesters to allow the government time to deliver on its commitments. Meanwhile, the Civil Society Coalition on Education for All had earlier demanded that the government suspend the Democracy Day celebration entirely and declare a national day of mourning until the Oyo school abduction victims were released. Furthermore, some state governors issued Democracy Day statements that struck a more sombre tone than in previous years, reflecting the weight of the ongoing crises. Notably, the June 12 protests represented the most organised civil society action against the Tinubu administration since the EndBadGovernance protests of August 2024. Consequently, the political cost of unresolved insecurity and economic hardship continues to accumulate for the administration heading into the 2027 election cycle.
Akpabio, Retired Justice Call for Electoral Reform
At the annual June 12 commemoration lecture in honour of late NEC Chairman Prof Humphrey Nwosu, Senate President Godswill Akpabio, retired Supreme Court Justice Abdu Aboki, and NHRC Executive Secretary Tony Ojukwu all called for deeper electoral reforms to ensure that democratic institutions delivered genuine dividends to citizens. In addition, Justice Aboki noted that the judiciary must be protected from political interference to preserve its role as the guardian of democratic rights.
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