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Corporate Gangsters and Electricity Corruption in Sierra Leone

Corporate Gangsters and Electricity Corruption in Sierra Leone

Update: 2024-05-05
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In 2011, Sierra Leone politicians enacted a new electricity legislation that created two parallel institutions, the Electricity Generation and Transmission Company (EGTC) and the Electricity Distribution and Supply Authority (EDSA) to replace the state-owned National Power Authority (NPA).


Since 1982, NPA oversaw electricity supply in Sierra
Leone, including the fixing of consumer tariffs. In 2016, international financial institutions ranked Sierra Leone 178 out of 189 countries with lowest electricity access. Development agencies stated that weak oversight of the electricity sector was responsible for the poor ranking, and they suggested that dismantling NPA and privatizing electricity supply would enhance electricity transmission and distribution capacity in the country.


However, the dismantling of NPA and the privatization of electricity supply in Sierra Leone has not resolved the country's perennial electricity crisis but has further worsened access to electricity and fueled corruption.


 In this episode, we reveal how local politicians, international financial institutions, and British and United States financed multinational corporations created a transnational project that exploited the dismantling of NPA and the privatization of electricity supply in Sierra Leone to corruptly enrich elites and corporations, whilst imposing fictitious foreign debts on the country.


This episode is part of the VOICE FROM EXILE commentary series of the Africanist Press.



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Corporate Gangsters and Electricity Corruption in Sierra Leone

Corporate Gangsters and Electricity Corruption in Sierra Leone

The Africanist Press