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NAFDAC seizes N1 trillion in drugs in nationwide crackdown

3 hours ago 18
  • Seals over 11,000 shops, arrests 40 in fight against fake medicines

  • Insists on death penalties for counterfeit drug peddlers

  • Says bridgehead market, will be reopened on its terms

From Juliana Taiwo-Obalonye, Abuja

In a massive operation, the National Agency for Food and Drug Administration and Control (NAFDAC) has disclosed that it has seized over N1 trillion worth of banned, expired, and substandard medical products across Nigeria’s major open drug markets.

The NAFDAC Director-General, Mojisola Adeyeye, made the disclosure while briefing State House Correspondents, an event organised by the media office.

“What we are currently underestimating is a figure of N1 trillion. Yes, that’s one trillion naira. This might be an underestimation for now, but once we complete the operation, we will have a clearer understanding of how these drugs are entering our country. As Governor Soludo said, these drugs are not spirits. They came into the country through borders, and as I often say, it takes a village to raise a child. It doesn’t take only NAFDAC and the Pharmacy Council of Nigeria (PCN) to ensure that we have sanity in our drug distribution or mitigate substandard falsified medicines,” she said.

Adeyeye said the operation, carried out over the past couple of weeks and involving 1,100 security operatives, uncovered USAID- and UNFPA-donated antiretroviral drugs and male condoms, which were found expired and repackaged for sale.

She emphasised the need for stricter penalties, calling for life imprisonment or death for counterfeit drug dealers, even as she said the agency plans to relocate open drug markets to coordinated wholesale centres within a year.

She said the agency has, in recent days, embarked on a sweeping enforcement operation across the country’s three major open drug markets: Onitsha, Aba, and Lagos.

She said the 87 truckloads of drugs confiscated represent the biggest haul in the agency’s history.

The operation was executed in Ariaria and Eziukwu Markets (Aba), Bridgehead Market (Onitsha), and Idumota Drug Market (Lagos).

She said it was part of NAFDAC’s National Action Plan (NAP 2.0) 2023-2027, aimed at eliminating counterfeit medicines, improving regulatory compliance, and safeguarding public health.

Adeyeye revealed that the exercise, which commenced on 9th February 2025, involved 1,100 security operatives, including military personnel, police, and Department of State Services (DSS) agents.

According to her, the security forces cordoned off the markets to prevent traders from concealing or smuggling out illegal products.

She affirmed that the operation uncovered shocking violations of drug storage and distribution regulations, including diverted donated medical supplies: large quantities of USAID- and UNFPA-donated antiretroviral drugs and condoms, meant to support Nigeria’s HIV/AIDS response, were found expired and repackaged for sale.

She said these life-saving medications were either improperly stored or deliberately resold for profit, undermining global efforts to combat HIV/AIDS in Nigeria.

Significant volumes of Tramadol, Flunitrazepam (Rohypnol), Nitrazepam, and Diazepam—drugs linked to rising drug abuse, crime, and insecurity—were seized.

The Director-General said the sheer volume of these narcotics was deemed sufficient to destabilise national security.

Also, she said a large quantity of Tafradol, recently banned in India after a BBC undercover investigation exposed its illicit export to Africa, was discovered in Onitsha.

According to her, the drug, unapproved anywhere in the world, has been widely abused in Nigeria.

Adeyeye noted that vaccines, prescription medicines, and thermolabile drugs (requiring cold storage) were found stacked in toilets, staircases, and rooftops at dangerously high temperatures.

Similarly, oxytocin injections and other essential medicines were stored under extreme heat, rendering them ineffective and potentially harmful.

Some warehouses were packed with pharmaceuticals in rooms with no windows, where temperatures could reach 40°C, accelerating chemical degradation.

On fake, expired, and unregistered drugs, she disclosed that banned and expired drugs were hidden in plumbing and wood plank sections of Onitsha’s Bridgehead Market, far from the authorities’ usual focus, while unregistered and falsified products were found in over 7,000 shops screened during the operation.

The Director-General announced that, so far, 40 arrests have been made, with suspects facing prosecution. The National Security Adviser (NSA), Mallam Nuhu Ribadu, coordinated security forces for the operation, ensuring strict compliance.

Adeyeye also said a database of the offending shops and their owners has been compiled for further legal action.

According to her, the seized drugs will be publicly destroyed in the three cities after the exercise.

She spoke of plans by NAFDAC and the Pharmacy Council of Nigeria (PCN) to relocate all open drug markets within the next year to six Coordinated Wholesale Centres (CWCs), one per geopolitical zone. NAFDAC is also seeking tougher penalties, calling on the National Assembly to amend the NAFDAC Act and the Counterfeit and Fake Drugs Act to impose life imprisonment or even the death penalty for convicted counterfeit drug dealers.

“With the signing into law of the Proceeds of Crime Act (POCA) for forfeiture of assets, the assets recovered from suspects will be treated as proceeds of crime after their conviction by the courts. We use this opportunity to call on the National Assembly to expedite the amendment of the NAFDAC Act NI LFN and the Counterfeit and Fake Drugs and Unwholesome Processed Foods C34 Act to include life sentences and the death penalty in the penalties for crimes committed under these Acts,” Prof. Adeyeye stated.

The Director-General said the sealed drug markets may be reopened in about a week.

“This exercise is purely an enforcement operation to protect public health and rid our country of falsified and substandard medical products,” she affirmed.

The NAFDAC DG explained why the shut markets at Onitsha Bridgehead cannot be easily reopened, stating that the situation has escalated beyond the organisation’s control:

“For the remaining period of the exercise, shops with non-violative or non-NAFDAC-regulated products are being reopened, while owners of such shops are required to sign undertakings agreeing to relocate to the designated Coordinated Wholesale Centre (CWC) upon completion.

“Meanwhile, the operation will continue at Onitsha Bridgehead until next week, when a similar process of opening shops to non-violative owners and charging violative ones accordingly will commence.”

She assured that NAFDAC will conclude by the end of next week, adding, “But the reopening will be on our own conditions.”

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