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President Bio and the Leadership of APC: A Courtesy Call but a Powerful Symbol

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President Bio and the Leadership of APC: A Courtesy Call but a Powerful Symbol
President Bio and the Leadership of APC: A Courtesy Call but a Powerful Symbol

By: Yusuf Keketoma Sandi Esq

At State House, a courtesy call became a powerful symbol. As President Bio met with the APC leadership following their return to governance, the photos told their own story. Handshakes carried warmth, smiles softened the room, and the atmosphere reflected a sincere willingness to listen, to engage and to move forward for the country we all serve.

The moment underscored an essential truth about leadership in challenging times. It showed a President who continues to keep the doors open for dialogue, and it highlighted the willingness of the APC’s leadership to engage constructively in the national interest. In a period when many expected distance, the meeting demonstrated maturity, calm and a shared responsibility to strengthen the country’s democratic fabric.

The images served as a gentle reminder: leaders are not enemies. In private, they often exchange smiles, share light jokes and engage one another with genuine cordiality. The photos reminded Sierra Leoneans that collaboration does not erase disagreement; it simply humanizes it. They illustrated that our democracy is strongest when dialogue prevails over boycott, and when understanding takes the place of suspicion.

The images also reflected a deeper truth often forgotten in heated political debates. Politicians, regardless of party, share countless connections. Many come from the same tribes, attended the same schools and colleges/universities, share family ties, worship in the same churches and mosques, and live in the same communities. Long before politics, there were friendships, histories and bonds that no election can erase.

For supporters and party members across SLPP and APC, the message is clear. The warmth and respect displayed at State House should guide how we speak to each other – on radio, online and in everyday conversations. We can challenge ideas without attacking people. We can disagree without hate, without malice, without rancor and without obscenity.

At this moment, many citizens may be tired of the political tittle‑tattle. They yearn for governance that delivers, leadership that listens and institutions that work. The warmth seen in those images is an invitation to refocus, so that the same spirit of calm, respect and shared purpose can move into Parliament, into local councils and into every space where decisions are made.

In the end, what matters most is Sierra Leone. SLPP and APC carry different colours and different visions, but we must both seek a future in which every citizen can live with dignity, pride and hope. The meeting offered a glimpse of what is possible when leaders choose unity over hostility.

A courtesy call, yes. But a powerful symbol of the Sierra Leone we can build together.