The sacred clock of the Nyasaland Public Service
Dear Judge Mbadwa,
My Lord, I come before this court today straight from the frontline of public service by which I mean I spent my morning leaning against a counter at a government department, listening to a chorus of three desktop computers humming in an empty room while a lone kettle boiled for the fourth time since morning.
My Lord, we must pause and offer a solemn prayer of thanksgiving for the public servants of Nyasaland. They are a unique species. They possess a psychological resilience so profound that the sheer panic of a citizen in need of a passport, a signature, or a land permit moves them to an almost meditative state of absolute stillness.
In Nyasaland, the official reporting time for government offices is legally mandated at 7:30am. However, according to the unwritten, ancestral code, this is merely a theoretical concept. It is the time the office building exists and not the time human beings should be inside it.
The true ritual begins at 9am. This is the sacred hour of the arrival.
The public servant enters the building, not with an air of urgency, but with the slow, dignified pace of a monarch returning from exile. They carry a small plastic bag containing two sweet potatoes and an envelope of tea bags. The next hour is dedicated strictly to workplace ergonomics such as wiping the desk, discussing the latest political appointments on the WhatsApp group, complaining about the morning chill, and organising the communal sugar contribution.
By 10am, actual service begins. But heaven forbid, My Lord, if you approach the desk between noon and 2pm. That is the lunch horizon. To disturb a public servant during this two-hour window is to commit a grave human rights violation. And by 4pm? The office is already undergoing an evangelical exodus. The drawers are locked, the handbags are hoisted, and the computers are shut down with a finality that suggests the apocalypse is scheduled for 4:05pm.
Maybe the strange work ethic is determined by the poor pay these poor souls are subjected to
However, My Lord, let us drop the satire and speak with the cold gravity that this court demands.
The culture of abuse, institutional theft, deliberate negligence, and systemic ghost-hunting within our civil service has gone past the point of remedial therapy. These are no longer benign tumours that can be treated with a gentle workshop in Fort Johnson or a colourful code-of-conduct booklet printed on glossy paper.
The cancerous cells of institutional decay in Capital Hill have developed such an aggressive, deep-seated, and irreversible sepsis that the entire administrative apparatus is toxic. The rot is in the bone. The corruption and unprofessionalism have become so standard that a civil servant who actually tries to work hard is viewed by their peers as a traitor, a deviant, or a spy.
My Lord, you cannot cure an advanced, septic infection with a lifestyle change or a motivational speech.
We have reached the grim threshold where only a radical, ruthless, and unapologetic surgical intervention can preserve what is left of the republic.
If the State does not find the political courage to wield the scalpel and cut away these necrotic limbs of bureaucracy, the sepsis will finish its journey to the heart of the nation. And when the heart stops, My Lord, not even the most beautiful campaign song will be able to resuscitate it.
I rest my case, My Lord, before the tea in the secretariat gets cold again.
Respectfully submitted,
John Citizen


