The novelist Chimamanda Ngozi Adichie has done what few have the fortitude to do: she has publicly accused a National Health Service trust of stonewalling an inquiry into the death of her son. This is not merely a family’s private agony spilling into the public square. It is a parable of the intellectual and institutional decay that has come to characterise our era. We are, in the famous phrase, living in a degenerate age that mistakes process for progress, and procedure for probity.
Adichie’s complaint is specific and devastating: that the hospital’s response to her son’s death has been a masterclass in obfuscation. Medical records are withheld. Meetings are postponed. Letters go unanswered. The family, she says, is left in a limbo of half-truths and official silence. One thinks of Kafka’s Josef K., but at least he knew his crime was imagined. For Adichie, the crime is real: the death of a child. And the labyrinth is not metaphorical but administered by state functionaries in lieu of accountability.
Why does this matter beyond the immediate tragedy? Because it is a mirror held up to a British establishment that has elevated managerial inertia to a civic virtue. The same logic that clogs coroners’ courts with delays, that buries whistleblowers under NDAs, that allows the Post Office scandal to fester for decades, now asserts itself in the most intimate of spaces: a mother’s grief. The NHS, that sacred cow, is too often a sanctuary for institutional cowardice. When a system is designed to minimise liability rather than maximise justice, the vulnerable pay the price. And Adichie, with her global platform, is the canary in the coal mine. What of the voiceless families without publishers, without prizes, without the means to shout?
One is reminded of the Roman concept of “iustitia”: justice not as a mechanism but as a living virtue, a personal duty of the powerful to the powerless. We have lost that. We now have “governance”: a secular priesthood of administrators who answer to spreadsheets, not consciences. Adichie’s demand is not for vengeance. It is for transparency. It is for the truth to be spoken plainly, without the bureaucratic circumlocutions that shroud incompetence in a fog of corporate jargon. She wants her son’s death to mean something, a lesson the system refuses to learn.
And yet, one fears the outcome. The trust will likely issue a statement of “deepest sympathies” and announce a “thorough review” that will conclude no one was at fault. The family will be offered a settlement on condition of silence. The public will move on. This is the cycle of British institutional life: tragedy, inquiry, whitewash, torpor. It is the death of accountability by a thousand cuts.
But perhaps there is a residue of hope. Adichie’s voice is a moral megaphone. She has forced a conversation that the establishment would rather avoid. She reminds us that justice is not a service to be rationed but a right to be claimed. If her son’s death spurs a change in how such inquiries are conducted, if it exposes the complacency that allows hospitals to treat grieving families as legal obstacles, then some light may yet emerge from this darkness. But do not hold your breath. The fall of Rome was not reversed by a single senator’s sorrow. It took centuries. We are still falling, and Adichie’s voice, however eloquent, is but a cry in the bureaucratic void.










