A New Vision for Sierra Leone: Uniting Against Dependency and Division
A presidential candidate who some might say has little chance of winning hopes his vision for 2028 will soon reach every part of Sierra Leone.
He also wants those who defend the protection of a convicted Dutch drug baron in Sierra Leone to find themselves isolated.
Alpha Grace, a natural medicine consultant, knows his chances in the election are slim, but as leader of the People Alliance Movement, he is determined to try.
Grace understands that the real power struggles are not on the ballot but hidden from view. These forces do not use chains; they rely on debt, dependency, and silence.
Breaking free begins with awareness, and more Sierra Leoneans are starting to see this.
Grace believes the biggest threat to Sierra Leone is not internal conflict, but outside influence disguised as help.
A country rich in resources but poor in citizens is not simply unlucky; it is being managed for others’ benefit. It is time to ask who gains from this.
Foreign interests always look out for themselves, so the real question is: who is making decisions in Sierra Leone?
When a few outsiders influence choices that affect millions, that is not partnership, it is control. Sierra Leone deserves openness.
A nation loses its independence when its future is decided by people who never walk its streets. Sierra Leone must speak up for itself.
Grace wants to help build a country where young people stay because they believe in the future, where dignity returns, leaders tell the truth, and real opportunities exist.
Alpha Grace points out that wise voices still exist, but few listen to them now. He has written about deforestation in protected areas, showing that this reveals a deeper problem: when institutions fail, national assets like water, safety, and biodiversity are at risk.
Silence cannot protect the future. Detaining people without charge in Sierra Leone is not just a problem; it is a crisis for the constitution.
After decades of corruption, the justice system needs deep reform to respect basic rights. People should demand openness and respect for human dignity.
Announcements without real plans, infrastructure, or results are not empowerment; they are distractions. Real economic progress depends on open institutions, reliable data, and real change.
In Sierra Leone, the healthcare system is not just failing; it is working as a corrupt system does: it takes, neglects, and abandons.
Every day, families enter government hospitals with hope and leave disappointed. Justice reform is not about moving a courtroom closer to people for a few days; it is about making justice part of the system.
Sierra Leoneans deserve more than empty promises and political shows. They deserve independent courts and equal rights under the law. Good governance is not about who is in charge, but about how decisions are made, how resources are used, and how people are treated.
Sierra Leone grows stronger when its people unite. Unity is not just an option; it is the base of progress. Whether it is the economy, education, energy, or government, the message is clear: Sierra Leone can rise, but only if everyone rises together.
The country has great potential, but too many people are stuck just trying to survive. The economy should help people move forward, not leave them behind. Energy is key to development. No country can grow in the dark.
Reliable electricity is not a luxury; it is essential. Frequent blackouts do not just stop the lights; they stop opportunity, productivity, and hope.
Sierra Leone needs a power sector that works. Independence is not just a date in history. It is a daily effort against those who want Sierra Leone to stay weak, divided, and dependent.
Independent Presidential Candidate Sierra Leone 2028: Dr. Alpha Grace
https://dralphagrace.com/about-dr.-alpha-grace

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