When Chimamanda Adichie’s son died suddenly in a Nigerian hospital three years ago, the author of ‘We Should All Be Feminists’ did what any grieving mother might do: she asked for transparency. What she got instead, she claims, is a wall of silence. Now, the celebrated novelist has gone public with her accusation that the hospital is stalling the inquest, demanding the kind of UK-style accountability that feels painfully absent in Nigeria’s private healthcare system.
Adichie’s statement, released earlier this week, is a searing indictment of a system where wealthy patients can pay for top-tier care but still find themselves powerless in the face of institutional opacity. Her son was treated at a private facility in Lagos, one often frequented by the city’s elite. Yet, according to Adichie, the hospital has repeatedly obstructed the coroner’s investigation, creating a labyrinth of delays and unanswered questions.
‘The hospital has been evasive, even after we agreed to pay for the inquest ourselves,’ she said. ‘In the UK, an inquest is a rigorous, transparent process. Here, it feels like a negotiation.’
Adichie’s case has struck a nerve in a country where medical negligence cases often disappear into a bureaucratic void. For many Nigerians, her struggle is not a privilege but a mirror: even the rich and famous cannot guarantee a proper investigation into a loved one’s death. The cultural shift she is demanding, a move towards what she calls ‘basic procedural justice’, feels both urgent and unlikely.
On the streets of Lagos, her call resonates with a weary familiarity. I spoke with a woman whose child died 42 hours after being admitted to a different private hospital. ‘I never got answers,’ she said. ‘They said it was malaria. I knew it was more. But who do you take it to? Police don’t investigate. Courts take years. So you bury your child and you stay quiet.’
Adichie is not staying quiet. Her public accusation has forced the hospital to issue a defensive statement, pledging ‘full cooperation’ while insisting they have already provided all relevant documents. The coroner, meanwhile, has remained largely silent.
What is at stake here is more than one family’s closure. It is the question of whether Nigeria’s private healthcare sector can evolve beyond profit and towards accountability. Adichie’s demand for UK-style transparency is a radical idea in a country where medical professionals often operate with impunity. But it is also a deeply human one: the right of a mother to know why her child is no longer alive.
This is not a story about a celebrity pulling strings. It is about the human cost of systems that prioritise reputation over truth. The cultural shift Adichie seeks is slow, painful, and uncertain. But by refusing to let her son’s death become another footnote, she has done something profound: she has made it a symbol.
Whether that symbol leads to change remains to be seen. But for now, in the cramped waiting rooms and quiet corridors of Nigerian hospitals, many parents are watching. And they are waiting, too.









