The attack on January 26 was the third time in a month that militants from the IS-linked Islamic State West Africa Province (ISWAP) group had plunged the city into darkness.
On a bustling street near Bakassi camp, which hosts more than 30,000 people displaced by the conflict in the region, residents were rejoicing.
“Seriously, I appreciate it,” Sihiyina Chinde, 24, sitting on a wooden bench, preparing pan-fried rice cake and grounded beans in a pan she could finally see thanks to the street lights.
“I’m a maths and statistics student and now I can read my books without using my torchlight.”
Across the road, a group of children were buying cold water, sold in small plastic bags.
“The light came back at 5:42pm,” said the shop owner, Ibrahim Mustafa Goni.
The power company has not yet released a statement but had said it was working on repairing the supply lines to the city of three million people.
“Life has been hard,” says 48-year-old Goni, “especially at the moment, in the hot season, when cold water is really needed.”
Thank goodness
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