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REGULATORY OVERREACH OR STATE-BACKED EXTORTION? NAFDAC’S BRIDGEHEAD RAID AND THE INFAMOUS ₦700,000 "ACCESS FEE" SCANDAL

 REGULATORY OVERREACH OR STATE-BACKED EXTORTION? NAFDAC’S BRIDGEHEAD RAID AND THE INFAMOUS ₦700,000 "ACCESS FEE" SCANDAL


By Daniel Okonkwo


The National Agency for Food and Drug Administration and Control (NAFDAC), mandated to ensure the safety and quality of medicines and consumables in Nigeria, recently launched sweeping enforcement operations across three major open drug markets—Idumota (Lagos), Ariaria (Aba), and Bridgehead (Onitsha). While the agency claims it was acting to safeguard public health, the nature, process, and consequences of the raids—particularly in Onitsha—raise grave concerns about transparency, fairness, and the rule of law.


Between February and March 2025, NAFDAC conducted what it described as a comprehensive enforcement campaign targeting unregistered, expired, substandard, and falsified medicines, as well as violations of storage and distribution standards. According to a statement signed by the agency’s Director General, Prof. Mojisola Adeyeye, the raids resulted in the seizure and destruction of pharmaceuticals worth over ₦1 trillion—a staggering figure that emphasizes the scale of the operation.


However, behind the official narrative of regulatory enforcement lies a troubling story of alleged extortion, procedural ambiguity, and economic hardship inflicted on traders, particularly at the Bridgehead Market in Onitsha, Anambra State.


Central to the traders’ grievances is the ₦700,000 “access fee” NAFDAC allegedly demanded from each shop owner before they could reopen their businesses. Over 1,000 shop owners are reported to have paid this fee—an amount they describe as not just burdensome but extortionate. The agency maintains that this fee complies with gazetted federal regulations and is tied to necessary compliance upgrades, such as ensuring proper ventilation, registration with the Pharmacy Council of Nigeria, and adherence to Good Storage and Distribution Practices (GSDP).


The key question is the ₦700,000 a regulatory fine or a fee for operational permits?


Is it imposed for a lack of windows and ventilation or the sale of counterfeit drugs?


Does the payment of this sum automatically render a shop compliant, or does it merely grant temporary access?


In a video available on social media where NAFDAC officials reportedly asked traders, “Are you in violation of that guideline?” Some traders acknowledged non-compliance by nodding, while others claimed ignorance of such requirements. Even if violations occurred, the question remains: does the offense justify a uniform ₦700,000 penalty? And if fake drugs were indeed involved, can this payment be construed as absolution?


The lack of clear, publicly accessible documentation outlining the basis of this amount, how it was calculated, and where the collected funds are allocated casts serious doubt on the credibility and integrity of the enforcement process.


The silence from the Anambra State Government has been deafening. As a government that collects revenue from Bridgehead Market, it bears a dual responsibility: protecting its citizens from harmful substances while also safeguarding their economic rights and civil liberties. The government should have investigated this apparent injustice against its people. They must ensure regulatory compliance incompatible with the need for fairness, due process, and economic compassion.


The Federal High Court in Awka is now being asked by the United Nigeria Group—an umbrella body of the affected traders—to intervene and enforce their fundamental rights, including the reopening of their shops and demanding transparency in regulatory impositions. Their appeal shows a growing perception that regulatory bodies act with impunity, exploiting legal grey areas to impose economic penalties without due justification.


There is no question that drug quality is crucial. Stability depends on environmental factors such as temperature, air, humidity, and light, as well as drug-specific characteristics like dosage form and manufacturing process. Proper storage practices are not optional—they are essential. Pharmacopeial standards mandate specific labeling, batch tracking, and storage protocols, and these must be enforced rigorously.


However, the methods of enforcement matter just as much as the regulations themselves. Punitive actions devoid of adequate sensitization, procedural fairness, and state oversight only breed resistance, mistrust, and social unrest. The trauma inflicted on legitimate business owners—many of whom were unaware of new regulations or unable to afford relocation—must not be ignored.


NAFDAC insists that “traders who complied with regulatory requirements have resumed business,” noting that over 2,500 traders in 3,500 shops have been operational since March 9, 2025. But what about the others? What about those driven into debt or bankruptcy by the ₦700,000 penalty? What about those who have yet to see the inside of their shops since the raids?


Hon. Afam Victor Ogene, representing Ogbaru Federal Constituency under the Labour Party, described NAFDAC’s actions as “scandalous, outrageous, and reprehensible.” His strong words echo the sentiments of many in Anambra who feel the agency’s actions were draconian and disproportionately targeted one of the Southeast’s most significant economic hubs.


Ogene referenced documented evidence of systematic extortion and has called for a legislative review of NAFDAC’s enforcement mechanisms, urging accountability in how regulatory decisions are made and enforced.


There is no doubt that counterfeit and substandard medicines pose a lethal threat to public health. NAFDAC is right to act—but its actions must be transparent, fair, and proportionate. The line between legitimate regulation and economic oppression must be clearly defined. When over ₦700 million is allegedly collected without detailed public documentation or third-party audit, alarm bells must ring. This ₦700,000 collection was brought to light by social commentator VeryDarkMan (VDM) through his social media platform.


As we await judicial pronouncements on this matter, one truth remains: enforcement without empathy and regulation without accountability cannot nurture lasting reform. The Nigerian people deserve better—from both their federal agencies and their state governments.


Profile International Human Rights Advocate 

REGULATORY OVERREACH OR STATE-BACKED EXTORTION? NAFDAC’S BRIDGEHEAD RAID AND THE INFAMOUS ₦700,000 "ACCESS FEE" SCANDAL

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