Lights Out in Nigeria - written by Chimamanda Adichie | Welcome to Linda Ikeji's Blog

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Monday, 2 February 2015

Lights Out in Nigeria - written by Chimamanda Adichie

Article written by award-winning writer Chimamanda Adichie, originally published on New York Times. Interesting read. Find below...
We call it light; “electricity” is too sterile a word, and “power” too stiff, for this Nigerian phenomenon that can buoy spirits and smother dreams. Whenever I have been away from home for a while, my first question upon returning is always: “How has light been?” The response, from my gateman, comes in mournful degrees of a head shake.
Bad. Very bad.
The quality is as poor as the supply: Light bulbs dim like tired, resentful candles. Robust fans slow to a sluggish limp. Air-conditioners bleat and groan and make sounds they were not made to make, their halfhearted cooling leaving the air clammy. In this assault of low voltage, the compressor of an air-conditioner suffers — the compressor is its heart, and it is an expensive heart to replace. Once, my guest room air-conditioner caught fire. The room still bears the scars, the narrow lines between floor tiles smoke-stained black.

Sometimes the light goes off and on and off and on, and bulbs suddenly brighten as if jerked awake, before dimming again. Things spark and snap. A curl of smoke rises from the water heater. I feel myself at the mercy of febrile malignant powers, and I rush to pull my laptop plug out of the wall. Later, electricians are summoned and they diagnose the problem with the ease of a long acquaintance. The current is too high or too low, never quite right. A wire has melted. Another compressor will need to be replaced.

For succor, I turn to my generator, that large Buddha in a concrete shed near the front gate. It comes awake with a muted confident hum, and the difference in effect is so obvious it briefly startles: Light bulbs become brilliant and air-conditioners crisply cool.

The generator is electricity as electricity should be. It is also the repository of a peculiar psychology of Nigerian light: the lifting of mood. The generator is lord of my compound. Every month, two men filled with mysterious knowledge come to minister to it with potions and filters. Once, it stopped working and I panicked. The two men blamed dirty diesel, the sludgy, slow, expensive liquid wreathed in conspiracy theories. (We don’t have regular electricity, some say, because of the political influence of diesel importers.) Now, before my gateman feeds the diesel into the generator, he strains it through a cloth and cleans out bits of dirt. The generator swallows liters and liters of diesel. Each time I count out cash to buy yet another jerrycan full, my throat tightens.

I spend more on diesel than on food.

My particular misfortune is working from home. I do not have a corporate office to escape to, where the electricity is magically paid for. My ideal of open windows and fresh, breathable air is impossible in Lagos’s seething heat. (Leaving Lagos is not an option. I love living here, where Nigeria’s energy and initiative are concentrated, where Nigerians bring their biggest dreams.) To try to cut costs — sustainably, I imagine — I buy an inverter. Its silvery, boxlike batteries make a corner of the kitchen look like a physics lab.

The inverter’s batteries charge while there is light, storing energy that can be used later, but therein lies the problem: The device requires electricity to be able to give electricity. And it is fragile, helpless in the face of the water pump and microwave. Finally, I buy a second generator, a small, noisy machine, inelegant and scrappy. It uses petrol, which is cheaper than diesel, and can power lights and fans and freezers but only one air-conditioner, and so I move my writing desk from my study to my bedroom, to consolidate cool air.

Day after day, I awkwardly navigate between my sources of light, the big generator for family gatherings, the inverter for cooler nights, the small generator for daytime work.

Like other privileged Nigerians who can afford to, I have become a reluctant libertarian, providing my own electricity, participating in a precarious frontier spirit. But millions of Nigerians do not have this choice. They depend on the malnourished supply from their electricity companies.

In 2005, a law was passed to begin privatizing the generation and distribution of electricity, and ostensibly to revamp the old system rooted in bureaucratic rot. Ten years on, little has changed. Most of the companies that produce electricity from gas and hydro sources, and all of the distribution companies that serve customers, are now privately owned. But the link between them — the transmission company — is still owned by the federal government.

I cannot help but wonder how many medical catastrophes have occurred in public hospitals because of “no light,” how much agricultural produce has gone to waste, how many students forced to study in stuffy, hot air have failed exams, how many small businesses have foundered. What greatness have we lost, what brilliance stillborn? I wonder, too, how differently our national character might have been shaped, had we been a nation with children who took light for granted, instead of a nation whose toddlers learn to squeal with pleasure at the infrequent lighting of a bulb.

As we prepare for elections next month, amid severe security concerns, this remains an essential and poignant need: a government that will create the environment for steady and stable electricity, and the simple luxury of a monthly bill.

152 comments:

  1. Replies
    1. Who's fault is it that she bought onitsha ac?

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    2. Beautiful! Chimamanda is a great writer no doubt

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  2. Maximum respect Chimamanda

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  3. Maximum respect Chimamanda

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  4. Let me read it patently


    #GodblessNigeria

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  5. INTERESTING AND NICE TO READ...
    WELL COMPOSED.

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  6. Very nice one, but is it gonna bring the change we need?

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    1. She wrote her thoughts on the issue, how is her article supposed to "bring change ". People are just funny.

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  7. Na today, naija light issue is dated as far back as 1983. So na God go resolve am. Linda take note!

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    1. God?? So God will come down from heaven and give us dams and power plants. Freakinf idiots making silly statements. Shut up if U have nothing worthwhile to say

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  8. Na today, naija light issue is dated as far back as 1983. So na God go resolve am. Linda take note!

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  9. Na today, naija light issue is dated as far back as 1983. So na God go resolve am. Linda take note!

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  10. Na today, naija light issue is dated as far back as 1983. So na God go resolve am. Linda take note!

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  11. hmmmmm...FOR MY HOME TOWN LYT NA CASE STUDY BT MY RESIDENT ADDRESS NOW I NO LIE U LYT NA 24/7...HARDLY SIEZE FOR A MAINTENANCE CHECK UP.I SO NJOY DS PLACE.tomjerryswit

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  12. She's beginnin 2 bore me. Talk bout thin line between luv n hate. Abeg make she pullover till i calm down over that depression ish.

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    1. Please shut up and go and sleep. Your sounding like a broken record. Like a depressed soul.

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    2. Is she getting money to work the road that the government are supposed to do? Certainly not!!!!

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  13. Well written


    Your comment will be visible after approval

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  14. we all know its all over for the govt of the day.. #SAIBUHARI

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  15. nice 1. change is inevitable at this critical time...

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  16. Do I need to save this page again before they take it down and call it mistake.

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  17. This is what you call an expose! Lol!

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  18. Apt, she wittingly gave voice to our murmurings.
    Won't be surprised if they tag her APC and unleash FFK on her.

    ~BONARIO~says so via NOKIA LUMIA

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    1. CONCERNED NIGERIAN2 February 2015 at 16:00

      I won't be surprised either.

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    2. Shattappp go follow your BOOHARI

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  19. Well written Chimamanda. The thing is that there are cabals that feast on this electricity project. They form that they are helping matters buy they don't. Here in Lagos you hardly see light and at the end of the month, they bring a huge bill for us to pay for light that we barely see. Oil lords will never allow Nigeria to have a steady power supply because it will affect their business, thereby leaving the poor masses at the verge of total super bowl.

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  20. Linda thanks for posting this article, I prefer it to Kim and Kanye crap, I would advise you be bringing more insightful articles like this to revive the dead reading culture, especially LIB readers.

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  21. Security and electricity our major priority and other things will follow. May the well spring of ur knowledge never grow dry. Great article ma'am

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  22. Nigeria my country. I cried inside when my 18 month old daughter said to me up nepa, mummy there is light. I remember saying those exact words to my own mother 37 years ago."Which way Nigeria, which way to go, I love my father land but how long before getting to the promise land".

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    1. Hmm. True that, we've had different government yet we still keep discussing the same malignant issue electricity. I hope the coming administration will tackle this issue permanently.

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  23. I Love this chic! well said! lets vote wisely. NAI!

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  24. nice write up
    beautiful lady with brain
    looking up to you

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  25. All she said is true bless you chiammada

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  26. lovely piece

    @lwkmd_naija

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  27. hmmmm electricity in nigeria smh God take control o

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  28. This lady is phenomenal

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  29. a.k.a EDWIN CHINEDU AZUBUKO said...
    .
    Keep doing naija proud abeg... Nothing do yu.....
    .
    .
    ***CURRENTLY IN JUPITER***

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  30. Well said. I clap a million tyms 4 Mrs Adichie. Electricity in this country is jst a Luxury

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  31. This are the kind of pple we need in this country, pple that will shew sentiment and say the truth, not those that will support and celebrate a fail government out of sentiment, A country that doesn't vote out bad leader can not progress,

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  32. Children shout and scream jst @ the site of light. Even my 1yr plus nephew screams also. Wat a country.

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  33. Interesting article
    And everything u said is true
    Electricity in nigeria is whack
    And yet we pay heavy bills for electricity we don't see

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  34. Soon the likes of Remo, Doyin, Abati, Anti NOI and PDP will respond to this article and tagged it anti-GEJ. Whereas reality is what she just summarised.....@least let have a change and see if we can get a better light(electricity).

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  35. U als want change, dt's good, for change press APC.

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  36. She is a brilliant writer.
    This is a well written piece; the conclusion hits the nail right on the head.

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  37. You deserve a hug for this piece. Gbam!

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  38. I love the way this woman writes, I can only aspire to that!

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  39. Febuhari is here to stay....gate of aso rock is open for GMB

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  40. Yall hear,dnt let bag of rice of stupid claims blind ur sight from voting right.#Change

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  41. Well written. I enjoyed every single line and I can relate to her plight. Common Nigerians lets vote right!

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  42. Sighs... We only hope for the best. Our votes counts NOT.

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  43. Gifted Chimamanda.
    Ride on. Nice1. #oneandonlynwa@gmail.com#

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  44. You have a point but what is your role to support the Nigeria?
    Let contribute to the development of Nigeria instead of blaming the government

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  45. As always Chimamanda put words to a situation that has plagued generations upon generations and she does it brilliantly. The fluidity of the write up makes it such an interesting read and there is no better way to drive her point home. The power is in our hands as electorates. no pun intended.

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  46. Sadly Jonathan didn't and obviously can't solve this major problem. The very more reason we need to try someone else. If that "someone" fails too like the present one, then change would definitely be inevitable (again), meaning we've not reached the destination of our long needed change. That is DEMOCRACY!

    We will keep changing leaders until we get it right! Not continue with failure, cos we fear if the next wud be like the present. Wonder why my people fear what they are already experiencing!

    The worst Buhari can be is end up being Jonathan, but there's a bright light (electrically sourced, I want to believe), at the end of the tunnel. And that is, he (Buhari) being the good change and not the bad continuity.

    God bless Nigeria.

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  47. Read!!!!.... I pray 4 a better naija

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  48. Well written article,i believe light needs to be our government top agender.

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  49. No matter how terrible Nigeria may be
    We will always remain it's citizens
    We are the changes Nigeria need 🔜LindaIkejiClassRep❤❤

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  50. Gbam, you have said it all. Since December 2014 na candle light PHCN dey give us. so ever since we just settle for Gen. I had to buy I better pass my neighbor to us during the day and the big gen at night to cool the refrigerator. I tire for Nigeria oooooo

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  51. I like ur writing buh that doesn't mean that it's totally true ma. Ubanagum

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  52. The inverter description cracked me up. Nice write up. Thats what we face in Nigeria.

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  53. She said" a government that WILL create" and not "a government that IS CREATING". It means that all the Nigerian elites have reached a consensus that Nigeria is ripe for a change. The problem is the poor people who constitute the greatest number of the voting population and who have everything to lose in the current order but still fall to the antics of PDP by demonising a saviour and the only hope left for Nigerians. Nigerian youths think, think , think.

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  54. I hope you have her permission to post this one. This Chimamanda can write!!

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  55. Speaking the minds and undiluted truth for every Nigerian couldn't be more better " i spends more on diesel than food and for government to create an enabling environment for steady and stable electricity, and the simple luxury of a monthly bill.

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  56. "My ideal of open windows and fresh, breathable air is impossible in Lagos’s seething heat."

    I beg your pardon! Not all of Lagos fits that bill. My corner of town is so planned that open windows and fresh air is limited only by your imagination.
    Regrettably this article has been read by the wider world who may now hold the misguided impression that all of Lagos is one uncomfortable stuffed up hellhole.

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    Replies
    1. Alas, someone misses the point. Is this article about fresh air in Lagos OR the poor power supply in the country. This is HER perspective. Jeez!

      ZZ

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  57. a government that make empty promises every now and then.i will give you power ,give good road and work for all the youth...after so many years are still coming to make same promises to us now! Change we need and Change must come.

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  58. I will like to read this book

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  59. It'a really shameful

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  60. This woman is wisdom in a being..she uses words without...

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  61. Can't wait for the day we'd have constant electricity in Nigeria. .. it'd be a big dream come true!

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  62. Chimamanda!!! i just love you

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  63. Beautiful
    Www.udokajane.blogspot.com

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  64. Hmmm ! Well written.

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  65. i love her work but she is gradually turning into a critic.You are never in Nigeria,u still can afford to power your generator but most nigerians cant and we dont critize her(nigeria)you come into naija and frown and wish and write about her with disgust but your voice cant do anything to improve her but well the white man finds you amusing and worthy to be paid.i hate when people play moral judge,biko u don get money ,oya do something.start with roads or electricity,paying peoples school fees isnt ok any more.

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    1. So you think she should personally take up the responsibility of tarring a road? Or opening her own power supply company?? NA wa o. So she should stop talking about the ills of the society? Let's all just be quiet and act like all is well. So sad.

      ZZ

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  66. Another master piece. The electricity situation in Nigeria is really bad that if we get "light" for 24hrs we begin to panic that once it's "taken" we may not get it back till after a whole week. God bless you Chima.

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  67. is it me or has she turned into a critic?

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  68. I agree with you nne. I wonder how I am going to cope after 10yrs of steady light. Everyone seems to depend on generator. I imagine it will be worse than we left it....completely anony on this maka ndi uta. Hehehe

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  69. I always love to read Chimamanda's articles. Lovely writer she is. She inspires me.

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  70. My writer ! Ihe I na ede na aka, 2 no fit share am jare! Quite a satirical and hilarious piece! Carryon

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  71. My writer ! Ihe I na ede na aka, 2 no fit share am jare! Quite a satirical and hilarious piece! Carryon

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  72. Best write up I've read in recent time. We need a change

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  73. Perfect writeupz.... A word is enuf for the wise!

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  74. well said chimamanda!! d noise generated by the generator itself is a story for anoda day.which way my country?#Asa#

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  75. You take permission, Linda? Abi you don stubborn?

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  76. Omoh!! this girl dey write sha. very well written, i could relate well with it.

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  77. obasanjo's government will forever be remembered for providing telecommunication for Nigerians,Buhari can leave a good legacy for himself by doing same with electricity.Light is life and with life comes power.Imagine what Nigeria will look life with constant power supply.......

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  78. I so much love and respect dis woman..this is the kinda role model youths are supposed to embrace not naked jobless "i wannabes"


    ¤¤¤¤¤QUEENMAYA¤¤¤¤¤

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  79. Chimamanda couldn't have said it better. Even though am not rlly affected for now, @ least not yet. It rlly breaks my heart. I wonder what would b left for our on-born generations. The only problem Nigeria has is bad leaders...God help us

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  80. God's grace will forever be with you Chimamanda for giving your voice to the voiceless and for being so compassionate.

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  81. Tears to down my eyes anytime I get to read a piece from this woman. You are indeed blessed. That was well said as it is with no mixed feelings I say to them #giveuslight.

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  82. On the 14th of February 2015, Nigerians will come out en masse to choose between two mediocres.

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  83. On the 14th of February 2015, Nigerians will come out en masse to choose between two mediocres.

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  84. Nice write up,pls vote PDP,lets try anida party for a change,enuf is enuf

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  85. Henry Ekene Obianika2 February 2015 at 13:54

    Nice article. But the one million dollar question is "When shall Nigerians boast of steady electric supply? I don't know! I just don't know.

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  86. Thanks alot!!!

    Amazing write-up...I advance my respect for you Dear Amanda!

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  87. Thank you my sister for this beautiful write up, Nigerians the ball is in our court. Vote Wisely...

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  88. interesting article...respect chimmamanda a lot

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  89. Good,only God ill help dis country

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  90. You are true patroit... God Bless you!!!

    This is why we are voting out GEJ.
    We hope for better Govt. Let's wait till then

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  91. Excellent Write-up!!!
    Part Of the Bed-rock of a Nation's Economy is Power Generation.

    I sincerely look forward to a day when Epileptic Power Supply will be a thing of The Past in Nigeria...

    I hope to see that day when Children and Adult like will not need to scream because 'NEPA' has restored Light...

    I look forward to the day when Our Light supply will allow electric-powered appliances outlived their manufacturer intended life-span...


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  92. CONCERNED NIGERIAN2 February 2015 at 14:11

    And therein lies a not so subtle hint to vote for change.

    Thank you.

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  93. Someone just said my mind..Thank you!

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  94. A 1983 headline in one of our national dailes has the caption- NEPA - No,more black out by 1986 deadline. This was durong the shagari era as president. I remember the excitement that fills my heart and the mood change like we won a lottery when u hear a resonating "Up Nepa" that lingers around for a few seconds when Nepa turns on the lights. I thought that by now we would have surmounted the power issue... Children of this generation are now facing the same thing. Successive govts have made little or wrong not well planned investments in power generation and distribution frameworks. Hence we are where we are 32years after that newspaper headline. Will this still be our story 30years from now? Ndi be anyi, ka chineke mezie okwu

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  95. This is on point Chimamanda. well written.

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  96. I envy the way this Lady writes. you just got to finish it once u start. Nice

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  97. I envy the way this Lady writes. You just got to finish it once u have started. Nice. I really enjoyed it. i hope Nigeria will change for the better.

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  98. Chimamanda at it again. She is always spot on. This summarises it all

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  99. Fantastic piece. Unfortunately ghana is taking the mantle from Nigeria. We now have power for 12 hours, and the next 24 hours OFF. The power rationing here is killing businesses, people are being retrenched. It's just a hot mess. So Nigeria, count your blessings.

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  100. Aptly captured

    Imagine, a big generator, inverter and smaller generator..

    The light situation needs serious deliverance problem!!!

    I think there's a cabal which has made pact with darkness in this country!!!

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  101. This indeed is the truth and nothing but the truth! God help us

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  102. Dear Chimanda, God bless you for this piece on the power situation in Nigeria. There can be no better words to decscribe the heratless and horrible situation that has been on going in the past 20 years.
    You rightly captured the sadness that befalls you each time we count the wads of naira to buy diesel and petrol daily to fuel generators, money being wasted that should have been saved for better things. Nevetheless, we will not give up in our desire to elect leaders that are purposeful in Nigeria.

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  103. rick1dude@yahoo.com

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  104. I love dis lady! Nice write up

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  105. well said. with great minds like Chimamanda's coming out of Nigeria, one can only hope for a better Nigeria

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  106. what a write up. such poetic terms are always heart warming to lovers of poetry. 9ja light issue shaaa...smh

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  107. She ve just said it all,nice piece dear

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  108. well said fine lady, can't stop loving her use of english.

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  109. "I cannot help but wonder how many medical catastrophes have occurred in public hospitals because of “no light,” ...Reading from her lips... hmmmm

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  110. I hereby elect Chimamanda to head the energy ministry. She'll fix the sector because she knows its problems.

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  111. We need this sound and n brilliant mind in nigerian H Government settings. Minds th hat glamour for change and the betterment of nigerians. Not selfish ignorant and illiterate folks.

    Pls vote for me come 2025. For a better Nigeria

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  112. We need briliant minds like this in Nigeria. Not selfish and selfcentred minds.

    pls Vote for me as the president of nigeria comes 2025.

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  113. Nice write-up but I think it is sponsored by APC. LOL

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  114. A very creative way of telling the truth about our "national pain"

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  115. pure and undiluted reality of a patriotic daughter. . we linger on in distant thoughts of what becomes of our nation's greatness, sacrificed on the alter of selfishness and greed indescribable!

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  116. can't tolerate the noise of the generator or the fume......

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  117. A brilliant writeup, well done Adichie. I hope the electorate votes wisely.

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  118. LInda notify us when she refuse to pay her nepa bills.......... Then I'll knw wot she z blabbing here





    +oparoescalade*

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  119. LInda notify us when she refuse to pay her nepa bills.......... Then I'll knw wot she z blabbing here





    +oparoescalade*

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  120. The question rightly asked must not be ignored. I wonder, like all of you, how hard is it really to get and preserve steady power. Ordinarily, i would think that it is genuinely tough and hard. But a look around me says otherwise. Countries that practically depend on the Nigerian economy one way or another, have solved this Gordian Knot. In all honesty, all we need is a government that wants to give us steady electricity. It does not take Abracadabra!

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  121. I want to write like you Amanda! I think I need a laying on of hands. Wow you look gorgeous! Ur gown was tailored to perfection! And thanks for feauturing my purse! Seeing others rock what you've created feels good... www.moniqj.blogspot.com

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Disclaimer: Opinions expressed in comments are those of the comment writers alone and does not reflect or represent the views of Linda Ikeji.

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