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Citizenship Daily > Blog > Column > Drug abuse in Nigeria as national emergency
Column

Drug abuse in Nigeria as national emergency

Editor
Last updated: February 5, 2026 6:34 am
Editor Published February 5, 2026
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By Ussiju Medaner

Nigeria stands at a critical crossroads in its fight against drug abuse and its cascading consequences including crime, insecurity, broken families, declining productivity, public health crises, and moral erosion. While law enforcement agencies have intensified their efforts, the crisis persists not because institutions have failed, but because society has largely abdicated its responsibility. Drug abuse in Nigeria is no longer a fringe problem affecting a few troubled individuals; it has become a national emergency with profound social, economic, and security implications.

According to the United Nations Office on Drugs and Crime, Nigeria has one of the highest prevalence rates of drug use in Africa, with an estimated 14.4 per cent of the population aged 15 to 64 having used drugs, significantly higher than the global average. The fight against drugs cannot be left solely to government agencies. It is a war that demands collective ownership, moral courage, and sustained societal collaboration.

At the forefront of Nigeria’s drug control efforts stands the National Drug Law Enforcement Agency, whose renewed vigor in recent years deserves commendation. In particular, the leadership of Brigadier General Mohamed Buba Marwa (rtd) has brought a rare combination of discipline, integrity, consistency, and strategic clarity to the agency. Across his public life, Marwa has demonstrated an unwavering commitment to service delivery, institutional reform, and national interest. His tenure at NDLEA has been marked by visible operational success, improved staff morale, increased drug seizures running into thousands of metric tons, expanded arrests and convictions, stronger international cooperation, and a reinvigorated national conversation around drug abuse. NDLEA records show a significant rise in drug seizures, convictions, and rehabilitation referrals since 2021. Such consistency in public service is rare and deserving of recognition, national engagement, and replication. Nigeria needs more men and women of this calibre, leaders whose reputation is anchored on competence rather than controversy.

However, even the most committed leadership cannot succeed in isolation. The unfortunate truth is that the fight against drug abuse and related vices in Nigeria continues to face formidable obstacles largely because the battle has been unfairly reduced to “Marwa and his men.” Society has quietly adopted the position that drug abuse is not a personal concern, failing to recognize that perpetrators, distributors, and victims are not outsiders. They are our neighbors, relatives, worshippers, classmates, colleagues, and children. Drug abuse thrives in environments of silence, denial, and social indifference. When communities look away, criminal networks flourish. When families shield offenders instead of correcting them, the cycle deepens. When society refuses to collaborate with law enforcement, enforcement becomes reactive rather than preventive.

Globally, successful drug control strategies emphasize one consistent lesson: enforcement alone is insufficient. Countries that have made meaningful progress combine strong law enforcement with deep societal involvement. In Iceland, youth drug abuse dropped dramatically through family engagement, community monitoring, school based interventions, and cultural reorientation rather than policing alone. In Portugal, drug decriminalization was paired with aggressive public health interventions, rehabilitation, and social reintegration, leading to lower overdose deaths and reduced HIV transmission. In Japan and South Korea, strong social stigma, workplace testing, and community accountability serve as powerful deterrents. These global experiences underline a universal truth: drug control succeeds when society refuses to normalize drug use and actively collaborates with the state.

Nigeria, unfortunately, has moved in the opposite direction. Drug abuse has gradually become normalized in popular culture, music, street life, and even elite spaces. Substances once considered taboo are now glamorized as symbols of boldness, creativity, or survival. This cultural shift has weakened moral resistance and created an enabling environment for abuse. National surveys indicate rising use of cannabis, tramadol, codeine, methamphetamine, and other synthetic drugs, particularly among young people. Yet culture is not immutable. It can be reshaped through deliberate moral leadership, consistent messaging, and institutional alignment.

Religious leaders must therefore reclaim their moral authority in this fight. Nigeria is a deeply religious society, and faith institutions remain among the most influential social structures. Churches, mosques, and traditional religious institutions shape values and behavior far beyond what government campaigns can achieve. Religious leaders must speak clearly, consistently, and courageously against drug abuse not as a vague social ill, but as a destructive force that undermines human dignity, family stability, and spiritual wellbeing. Silence from the pulpit has consequences. Moral clarity saves lives.

Community leaders, traditional rulers, youth leaders, women associations, and neighborhood unions must also take ownership of this struggle. Drug abuse does not begin in dark alleys; it often starts in familiar spaces such as homes, schools, streets, and social gatherings. Communities know their own. They know who deals, who distributes, who recruits, and who is at risk. When communities collaborate with law enforcement through intelligence sharing, early reporting, and social pressure, drug networks lose their anonymity. The culture of “it does not concern me” must give way to a culture of shared responsibility. Societies that protect criminals eventually become their victims.

Institutions, both public and private, must be integrated into Nigeria’s drug control architecture. Drug abuse is not only a criminal justice issue; it is a public health, educational, economic, and social stability issue. One practical preventive approach is mainstreaming drug testing into key social processes. Mandatory drug testing as part of pre wedding medical screening can help reduce marital instability, domestic violence, financial irresponsibility, and mental health crises, many of which are linked to substance abuse. Marriage is a foundational institution. Safeguarding it from hidden drug dependency is both preventive and prudent.

Hospitals should include drug testing as part of routine diagnostic procedures, especially for patients presenting with mental health disorders, unexplained injuries, recurrent trauma, or behavioral disturbances. Early detection enables timely intervention, counseling, and rehabilitation rather than delayed criminalization. Treating drug abuse as a health concern alongside a legal one aligns Nigeria with global best practices and reduces stigma driven concealment.

Educational institutions, particularly tertiary institutions, must also play a proactive role. Universities, polytechnics, and colleges are high risk environments for experimentation due to peer pressure, stress, and newfound independence. Mandatory drug testing for newly admitted students followed by periodic testing can serve as both deterrence and early warning. Institutions should invest in counseling units, peer education programs, and rehabilitation partnerships. The objective should be correction, not condemnation.

Employers, especially in sensitive sectors such as transportation, construction, healthcare, education, and security, must require mandatory drug testing for employees, particularly new hires. Drug abuse in the workplace reduces productivity, increases accidents, compromises safety, and inflates healthcare costs. International labor standards recognize workplace drug testing as a legitimate occupational safety measure. Nigeria cannot afford to ignore this reality.

Similarly, the Federal Road Safety Corps should institutionalize compulsory drug testing as a prerequisite for issuing and renewing driver’s licenses. Driving under the influence of drugs is as dangerous as drunk driving, yet remains under policed. Given Nigeria’s alarming rate of road traffic fatalities, integrating drug testing into driver certification could save thousands of lives annually.

At the policy level, government must reframe the fight against drugs as a fight against crime and insecurity. Drug abuse fuels armed robbery, kidnapping, banditry, cultism, terrorism, and domestic violence. Many perpetrators of violent crimes operate under the influence of drugs that lower inhibitions and heighten aggression. Funding the war against drugs is therefore a core national security investment, not a peripheral social expense.

Nigeria must also expand rehabilitation infrastructure. Enforcement without rehabilitation creates a revolving door of arrest, release, and relapse. Effective drug control requires accessible, affordable, and humane treatment centers nationwide. Public private partnerships, faith based organizations, and community groups can play critical roles if properly regulated and supported.

Youth engagement is equally essential. Young people are both the most vulnerable and the most powerful allies in this fight. Youth focused education, skills acquisition, employment opportunities, and mentorship reduce the appeal of drugs as an escape mechanism. A society that abandons its youth should not be surprised when drugs fill the vacuum.

Ultimately, the fight against drug abuse in Nigeria is a test of national character. It asks difficult questions about responsibility, collaboration, and moral courage. Law enforcement can disrupt supply, but only society can reduce demand.

The consistency and commitment demonstrated by NDLEA under Buba Marwa’s leadership prove that progress is possible. What is required now is national alignment. Drug abuse thrives in isolation; it collapses under collective resistance.

Nigeria’s future depends on the choices made today. Victory over drug crimes is victory over insecurity. Victory over addiction is victory over despair. And victory over societal silence is victory over national decline. The fight must no longer belong to “the man and his boys.” It must belong to us all.

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