₦3bn Fake Drug Empire Exposed as NAFDAC Seizes Over 10 Million Counterfeit Medicines in Lagos

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Nigeria’s drug regulatory authority, National Agency for Food and Drug Administration and Control (NAFDAC), has dismantled what it describes as one of the most dangerous counterfeit medicine networks uncovered in recent years, seizing more than 10 million doses of fake and banned pharmaceuticals with an estimated street value exceeding ₦3 billion.

The operation, carried out in Lagos, revealed multiple warehouse buildings deliberately constructed to look like residential homes, a strategy that allowed the syndicate to store and distribute counterfeit drugs while avoiding public attention.

Speaking at a media briefing, NAFDAC’s Director of Investigation and Enforcement and Chairman of the Federal Task Force on Fake and Substandard Products, Mr. Martins Iluyomade, disclosed that the raid was triggered by intelligence gathered during a training meeting held on February 3, which flagged suspicious movements around the Trade Fair–Navy axis.

Following the intelligence, enforcement officers visited the location and discovered a deserted cluster of structures used solely for illegal drug storage.

“The environment was carefully chosen. It is not a place people naturally visit, which made it easier for these operators to remain hidden,” Iluyomade said.

Inside the warehouses, officials recovered large volumes of counterfeit medicines, including injectable anti-malarials, antibiotics, sachet formulations, blister-packed drugs, and banned products such as Analgin, which has been outlawed in Nigeria for over 15 years.

NAFDAC warned that the seized items were not minor counterfeits but critical life-saving medicines, posing severe risks to public health.

“These are injections used in emergency situations like cerebral malaria. When fake drugs are administered in such cases, the consequences can be fatal,” Iluyomade noted.

According to the agency, the counterfeit anti-malarial injections alone could have endangered more than three million lives, while the total quantity recovered across all products surpassed 10 million doses.

Iluyomade also highlighted the advanced methods used by counterfeiters, noting that even professionals sometimes struggle to distinguish fake drugs from genuine ones due to near-perfect replication.

“These syndicates clone original medicines, reproduce them abroad with extreme precision, and push them back into our distribution chain,” he explained.

In total, eight trailer-loads of counterfeit medicines and cosmetics were evacuated from the site. NAFDAC confirmed that all seized products have been secured and will be destroyed to prevent them from reaching consumers.

The agency described the operation as the work of a well-coordinated international criminal network, involving collaborators both within and outside Nigeria, and reaffirmed its commitment to intensifying surveillance, enforcement, and public awareness to protect Nigerian lives.

 

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