Tag: Prof. Mojisola Adeyeye

  • NAFDAC DG Vows No Retreat as Agency Undertakes All-out Enforcement of Ban on Alcohol in Sachets

    NAFDAC DG Vows No Retreat as Agency Undertakes All-out Enforcement of Ban on Alcohol in Sachets

     

    – DG Warns – NAFDAC remains resolute in its mission to ensure that only safe, wholesome, and properly regulated products are available to Nigerians

    – Says NAFDAC has, however, not closed down any company that makes alcohol. The Agency only ban the alcohol in sachet and small containers less than 200ml

    (NAFDAC DIRECTOR GENERAL, Prof. Mojisola Adeyeye)

     

    – Alcohol manufacturers were given six years moratorium to phase out sachet and small-volume alcohol packaging by January 31, 2024, later extended to December 2025 to allow industry operators to exhaust old stock and reconfigure production lines. – Prif. Adeyeye

     

     

    By Biola Lawal
    Abuja (FLOWERBUDNEWS): NAFDAC Director General, Prof. Mojisola Adeyeye has vowed to effectively enforce the ban imposed on the production and sale of alcohol in sachets and small plastic bottles in the country.

    Prof. Adeyeye, who made the declaration in a public statement she personally signec to underscore its importance, said that alcohol in sachets had become ”public health menace.”

    Consumption of alcohol in sachets and small plastic bottles ”has been linked to increased incidences of domestic violence, road accidents, school dropouts, and social vices across communities,” Prof Adeyeye disclosed.

    She said that NAFDAC had resumed enforcement of ban on the production and sale of alcoholic beverages in sachets and small-volume PET/glass bottles (below 200ml), in line with the recent directive of the Senate of the Federal Republic of Nigeria.

    Prof Adeyeye said that the decisive action, ordered by the Nigerian Senate and backed by the Federal Ministry of Health and Social Welfare, underscores the Agency’s statutory mandate to safeguard public health and protect vulnerable populations—particularly children, adolescents, and young adults—from the harmful use of alcohol.
    .
    She stated that the proliferation of high-alcohol-content beverages in sachets and small containers less than 200 ml had made the products easily accessible, affordable, and concealable, leading to widespread misuse and resultant addiction among minors and some commercial drivers.

    ”This public health menace has been linked to increased incidences of domestic violence, road accidents, school dropouts, and social vices across communities.

    ”Placing a label to read “not for children” on the sachets and the small containers will not work,:: the NAFDAC Boss stressed.

    Labelling ”cannot be enforced because of the peculiarity of the society. Many parents don’t know their children take alcohol in sachet because the pack size can be easily concealed and the sachet is cheap,” She said.

    History of six years of moratorium given to manufacturers to reconfigure their product lines:
    In December 2018, NAFDAC, the Federal Ministry of Health, and the Federal Competition and Consumer Protection Commission (FCCPC) signed a five-year Memorandum of Understanding (MoU) with the Association of Food, Beverage and Tobacco Employers (AFBTE) and the Distillers and Blenders Association of Nigeria (DIBAN) to phase out sachet and small-volume alcohol packaging by January 31, 2024, Prof Adeyeye explained.

    She added that the moratorium was later extended to December 2025 to allow industry operators to exhaust old stock and reconfigure production lines.

    .She emphasised that the current Senate resolution aligns with the spirit and letter of that agreement and with Nigeria’s commitment to the World Health Assembly Global Strategy Resolution to Reduce the Harmful Use of Alcohol (WHA63.13, 2010), to which Nigeria is a signatory since 2010.

    ”The aim of the Resolution is to protect vulnerable population such as children and the youth. The ban on sachet packaging and PET botttle less than 200 ml is to make it difficult for children to get to alcohol and its consumption,” the DG said.

    ”NAFDAC approves alcohol in bigger pack sizes. The small size of the sachet makes it easier for underage to conceal from parents and teachers. Report from schools show that children conceal the sachets.

    ” A teacher recently reported that a student said he couldn’t take exam without taking sachet alcohol.

    ” NAFDAC did not close down any company that makes alcohol. The Agency only ban the alcohol in sachet and small containers less than 200ml,” Prof. Adeyeye stated.

    According to the DG, :“This ban is not punitive; it is protective. It is aimed at safeguarding the health and future of our children and youth by not allowing alcohol in small pack sizes.

    ”The decision is rooted in scientific evidence and public health considerations. We cannot continue to sacrifice the wellbeing of Nigerians for economic gain.

    ”The health of a nation is its true wealth.”NAFDAC reiterates that only two packages of alcoholic beverages are affected by this regulation—spirit drinks packaged in sachets and small-volume PET/glass bottles below 200ml,” She declared.

    ”The Agency calls on all stakeholders, including manufacturers, distributors, and retailers, to comply fully with the phase-out deadline, as no further extension will be entertained beyond December 2025.

    ”The Agency will continue to work collaboratively with the Federal Ministry of Health and Social Welfare, the Federal Competition and Consumer Protection Commission (FCCPC), and the National Orientation Agency (NOA) to implement nationwide sensitization campaigns on the health and social dangers associated with alcohol misuse ,,She assured.

    ”NAFDAC remains resolute in its mission to ensure that only safe, wholesome, and properly regulated products are available to Nigerians,’:. She concluded.

     

  • NAFDAC:  2018 Todate:  Prof. Mojisola Adeyeye’s Scorecard, a Continuing Legacy of Uncommon Achievements and Selfless Service

    NAFDAC: 2018 Todate: Prof. Mojisola Adeyeye’s Scorecard, a Continuing Legacy of Uncommon Achievements and Selfless Service

     

     

    –‘We’re now recognized globally as having a “stable, well-functioning, and integrated” regulatory system” – Prof. Adeyeye

     

    (Prof. Mojisola Adeyeye earned unique commendation from President Bola Ahmed Tinubu for her lofty achievements in NAFDAC, including taking Nigeria to WHO level 03 few years ago and retaining the status)

     

    (Prof Mojisola Adeyeye is a Professor of Pharmaceutics, Manufacturing Science and Drug Product Evaluation at the College of Pharmacy, Roosevelt University in Schaumburg, Illinois, where she spent 7 years.[4] She was also a Professor of Pharmaceutics and Manufacturing for 21 years at Duquesne University in Pittsburgh, Pennsylvania, USA. She is Senior Fulbright Scholar and Specialist and 2008 American Association of Pharmaceutical Scientists Fellow (the first African woman fellow).

     

    (Prof. Mojisola Adeyeye sensitising Nigerians on public health)

     

     

    By Biola Lawal
    When President Bola Ahmed Tinubu announced the removal of Chief Executive Officers of all federal government parastatals in late 2023, it was not surprising at all, that the Commander-in-Chief left Prof. Mojisola Christianah Adeyeye untouched as the Director General of the National Agency for Food and Drug Administration and Control (NAFDAC).

    Political observers discerned then that, the singular action of retaining Prof. Adeyeye in NAFDAC, showed that President Tinubu was truly on top of the country’s situation – positive or negative in all major sectors of Nigeria’s national life, especially, the crucial public health sector, before ascending the nation’s leadership.

     

    (Prof Mojisola Adeyeye with hubby and pillar of support, Distinguished Senator Olusola Adeyeye)

     

    ”It showed that, President Tinubu is not a careless person, and was truly knowledgeable on the nation’s progress and setbacks even before ascending the Presidential Seat,” a veteran media practitioner, Iyiola Olalere stressed.

    From late 2017 when Prof. Mojisola Adeyeye took over the mantle of leadership, NAFDAC, the Agency saddled with Safeguarding the health of Nigeria’s over 200 million people, had undergone so much incredible transformation through technological, administrative and innovative surgical operations.

    Prof Adeyeye’s leadership has earned the honour, respect and recognition Nigeria now enjoys as a nation with one of the most reliable, trustworthy, effective and efficient health regulatory body in the world.

    The successes of Prof Adeyeye’s bold, well-thought out initiatives and actions, is now bringing global respect and honour to Nigeria among commity of nations in the global human health protection and management, a stakeholder stated.

     

    -Prof . Adeyeye distinguishedly summed  up her incredible achievements through a statement on Wednesday reproduced verbatim for dissemination and historical record purposes:

     

    PROF MOJISOLA CHRISTIANAH ADEYEYE, DIRECTOR GENERAL MEDIA PARLEY AND SPEECH WEDNESDAY 21ST JANUARY, 2026 MODERNISATION AND FOUNDATION LAYING OF NAFDAC REGULATORY SYSTEMS (2018 – DATE): REFLECTIONS ON 2025

    It is my pleasure to address you today on the modernisation of NAFDAC’s regulatory systems, a road map that started in January 2018 with the drive to safeguard the nations’ health by imbibing and implementing international standards and best practices in all regulatory processes.

    The road map was very steep, rough with a lot of challenges. The foundation laying came with a resolve to start from the beginning which was based on establishing a Quality Management System (QMS) and having a Legal Framework for all the regulatory activities. This was accompanied by a continued evolution of all the regulatory practices

    THE FOUNDATION FOR MODERNIZATION: Regulatory modernisation is a strategic imperative to ensure that our systems remain credible, efficient, transparent, and fit for purpose, while protecting public health and supporting access to quality, safe, and effective regulated products.

    Modernization of NAFDAC is rested on the five Strategic Pillars of NAFDAC which are:                1) Strong Leadership and Governance;               2) Institutionalization of Best Practices;   3) Safety and Quality of Regulated Products;   4) Continuous Monitoring along the Supply Chain, and   5) Efficient Financial and Performance Management.

    The foundation shown below is laid on the composite of the Pillars but molded based on Institutionalization of Best Practices. Establishment and Implementation of Agency-Wide Quality Management Systems.

    At the foundation of NAFDAC’s implementation of Individualized Development Plans (IDPs)/ Regulatory System Strengthening interventions was the establishment of a QMS based on ISO 9001:2015 standard, which enabled NAFDAC design, implement and institutionalize systems, processes, policies, guidelines and procedures for all regulatory processes that ensure consistent delivery of services and regulatory system strengthening.

    Notable among these are: Focus on the ConsumerPolicies and SOPs on risk management during public health emergenciesGuidelines for complaints and appeal against regulatory decisionsThese instruments ensure fairness, consistency, and preparedness in regulatory decision-making. Lending further credence to these efforts,

    NAFDAC attained ISO 9001 certification in 2019 and has since demonstrated a culture of continual improvement by consistently sustaining the certification to date. Institutionalization of Agency-Wide Good Regulatory Practices One of our most significant achievements has been the institutionalization of Good Regulatory Practices (GRP) across the Agency based on strong legal framework.

    This involves embedding principles of transparency, accountability, consistency, stakeholder engagement, and evidence-based decision-making into our regulatory processes.

    To support this, NAFDAC strengthened and gazetted more than 28 regulations for our regulated products, providing a robust legal and operational framework that ensures clarity, predictability, and fairness in regulatory oversight.

    MEDICINES REGULATION AND CONTROL: Nigeria’s engagement with the WHO Global Benchmarking Tool (GBT) marked a defining moment in the evolution of NAFDAC’s regulatory system.

    The composition of the GBT team in 2018 and the commencement of the WHO benchmarking programme provided us with an objective, internationally recognised framework for assessing regulatory performance.

    Following this, NAFDAC underwent its first formal benchmarking assessment by the World Health Organization in June 2019. This exercise was not merely diagnostic; it culminated in the IDPs that catalysed the systematic identification of gaps, drove targeted institutional reforms, strengthened regulatory systems, and aligned our practices with global best standards.

    Thus began Nigeria’s journey toward achieving a stable, well-functioning, and fully integrated regulatory system. The elements used for the foundation of medicine regulation are Quality Management, ISO-Aligned standards Good Regulatory Practice mentioned earlier, Reliance and Risk-based approach to registration and market surveillance post approval.Regulatory Reliance and Regional Harmonization

    Recognizing the need for efficiency in an increasingly complex regulatory environment, NAFDAC has actively adopted regulatory reliance and regional harmonization mechanisms.

    It is a key principle underscoring the WHO GBT.By leveraging trusted regulatory decisions and WHO prequalification outcomes, we have reduced duplication of effort, improved turnaround times, and ensured timely access to safe, effective, quality, and affordable essential medicines and vaccines.

    Our regulatory maturity has also positioned Nigeria as a mentor at both global and regional levels under the WHO GBT framework, contributing to capacity building across Africa.The cumulative effect of institutionalizing the above represents ML3 benchmarking of medicines in March 2022. As a Zonal Director puts it:

    “The WHO has a system to grade how well a country’s drug and food regulatory agency works. It’s like a report card. Level 1 is failing. Level 2 is passing. Level 3 is excellent. Level 4 is outstanding. Nigeria moved from struggling to excellent.

    ”We’re now recognized globally as having a “stable, well-functioning, and integrated” regulatory system”.

    WHO Global Benchmarking Tool (GBT) Even more noteworthy is the fact that NAFDAC was successfully re-benchmarked in 2025. And became the first regulatory authority in Africa to achieve this feat, underscoring the strength, resilience, and institutional maturity of our regulatory systems.

    In addition, NAFDAC successfully underwent formal WHO benchmarking of medical devices regulation in 2024, expanding regulatory maturity beyond medicines and strengthening oversight of an increasingly important product category.

    The Agency’s trajectory into compliance with international standards – ISO 9001:2015 (2019), ML3 (2022), International Medical Device Regulatory Forum (IMDRF) – 2023, successful ML3 Re-benchmarking (2025), recognition by leading national regulatory authorities (NRAs) of NAFDAC’s strengthening of its regulatory framework, implementation of many international guidelines, led to the prestigious admission of NAFDAC as 24th member into the International Council for Harmonization (ICH) in November 2025 in Singapore.

    This achievement is significnat because there are 194 NRAs globally and ICH is comprised of only 25 member NRAs.

    LOCAL MANUFACTURING AND QUALITY-DRIVEN NAFDAC REGULATION:

    As a means of improving access to medicines to our citizens, NAFDAC initiated 5+5 regulatory directive in 2019 and the The Ceiling List in 2020 designed to phase out the importation of selected medicines that could be manufactured locally.

    The selected products are those for which local manufacturers have the capacity to produce.Under the 5+5 initiative the manufacturers and Market Authorization Holders were given five years moratorium of five years post the five-year registration license to set up facility locally or do contract manufacturing from existing suitably qualified local manufacturers.

    The Ceiling List facilitated local manufacturing through increase in the number of products that can only be manufactured locally from 9 products to 36.These led to growth in facility layouts submissions for both Pharmaceutical and Medical Devices companies.

    As of October 2025; a total of 161 layout reviews has been approved by the Agency (Existing companies – 65 and New companies – 96)Medical Devices Coys: 6 (New companies)There was a corresponding shift from importation to local production. More than 70% of products under 5+5 and Ceiling list are now locally manufactured. reflecting growing local industry confidence and investment.Ratio of Import: Locally manufactured – From 70:30 (2019) to 60:40 (2025)Good Manufacturing Practice (Quality) compliance is easier with local manufacturersContract manufacturing partnerships with compliant local manufacturers also increased from 10 in 2019 to 87 in 2025This approach is reducing reliance on international supply chains and supports the development of domestic production capacity.

    This reflects a strategic move toward sustainable and scalable local operations.There has been a marked increase in foreign investment, particularly in the medical devices sector. International investors are entering joint ventures with Nigerian firms to establish local manufacturing facilities, further boosting industrial growth.

    Examples: Finecure, India & Pinnacle Health Pharma, NigeriaSD Biosensor, South Korea & Codix Bio, NigeriaTroment, Turkey & NASENI (National Agency for Science and Engineering Infrastructure) Another positive offshoot of engaging of local manufactures is increasing implementation of technology transfer of formulations for which there is capacity locally. Examples includeInnova Pvt India and Fidson Healthcare PlcSD Biosensor and Colexa Biosensor, NigeriaGSK and Fidson Healthcare PlcMedicine, Vaccines and Medical Device Pharmacovigilance (Safety Monitoring) Coordination

    The following milestones were attained since 2018 with key examples

    1. Institutional Strengthening of National Pharmacovigilance Coordination Nigerian National Pharmacovigilance Policy (2020)Good Pharmacovigilance Practice Regulations 2021Guidelines for ADR reporting by MAHs and healthcare professionalsPharmacovigilance Inspection Guidelines for Nigeria, Regulated Drugs 2024.

    2. Establishment and Maintenance of a Functional National Safety Database Establishment of a national ADR/AEFI reporting and medicine-related problems database.Establishment of national AE/Incident reporting database for medical devices, IVDs and related products

    3. Digital Transformation of Pharmacovigilance ReportingDeployment of electronic safety reporting platforms, including:Med Safety AppNAFDAC E-Reporting PlatformStrengthened national signal detection and monitoring capacity.

    4. Expansion of Pharmacovigilance Scope and Specialised Safety MonitoringExpansion of pharmacovigilance scope to include drugs, vaccines, medical devices, and cosmetics, ensuring lifecycle safety monitoring of all registered medical products.Enhanced Passive Surveillance for Vaccination Programmes through programmes like the African Union Smart Safety Surveillance (AU3S) initiative

    ,LOOKING AHEAD:  As we look to the future, NAFDAC remains firmly committed to continuous improvement. Our priorities include the following goals which are anchored on sustainability, innovation, and public health protection.

    Advancement to WHO GBT Maturity Level 4 and designation as a WHO-Listed Authority (WLA)Transition to ISO 9001:2026 certificationDeepening and expanding regulatory reliance pathways

    Full digitalization of regulatory processes through the implementation of the Integrated Regulatory Information Management System (IRIMS) and Artificial Intelligence in Drug Approval, Safety and Efficacy.

    Monitoring Strengthening local manufacturing through smart and predictable regulation Consolidating Nigeria’s role in global and regional regulatory leadership

    FOOD SAFETY REGULATION AND MODERNIZATION:  Over the years, the scope, complexity, and volume of regulated food products have expanded significantly, driven by rapid advancements in food technology, globalization of trade, and increasing digitalization of regulatory processes.

    These realities have necessitated a deliberate shift from traditional regulatory models to modern, technology-driven, and risk based regulatory systems.

    A major achievement is the decentralization of the food registration process in 2018, which has significantly supported the timely registration of the growing number of locally produced processed food products.

    This has been beneficial to micro-scale and small-scale food industries, which previously faced challenges related to product registration. This initiative not only promotes local manufacturing but also strengthens regulatory oversight at State and Zonal levels. Significant strides in harnessing the digital transformation and automation have also been made.

    The Directorates have leveraged on the process improvement modules across electronic platforms such as NAFDAC Automated Product Administration and Monitoring System (NAPAMS), e-permits, Digital Fortification Quality Traceability Plus – DFQT+), Laboratory Information Management System (LIMS), Trade.gov, and other digital solutions which have resulted in an improved efficiency, reduced manual bottlenecks, and improved regulatory turnaround time.

    Recognizing that modernization is driven by people skilled in the art, NAFDAC prioritized capacity building through the development of a robust curriculum and structured training plans, alongside the use of digital learning platforms, regulatory officers are continuously equipped with the skills required to operate in a modern regulatory environment.

    This has translated into improved efficiency and strengthened regulatory activities.NAFDAC gazetted the Fats and Oils and Food Containing Fats and Oils Regulations in 2022. Collaboration with other MDAs and Partners to develop the Strategy and Roadmap. This is to implement and enforce the set regulatory limits for Trans Fatty Acids.

    It is established worldwide that cardiovascular diseases remain the leading cause of mortality worldwide. TFAs increased risk of cardiovascular diseases by increasing the ratio of LDL cholesterol to HDL cholesterol. The regulation is meant to reduce harm and improve quality of life of the citizenry.

    The Agency has also enhanced capacity building for food safety management systems (FSSC 22000, HACCP, GMP, etc.) and Food Fraud.NAFDAC has also implemented strategic interventions in 2025/2026 to reduce the harmful use of alcohol in children, including the phased elimination of sachet alcohol and below 200ml alcohol packaged in PET and glass bottles, as well as the reduction of alcoholic strength in small-volume containers.

    These actions underscore our commitment to public health protection.These achievements clearly demonstrate that modernization is not merely aspirational—it is already delivering tangible, measurable results that are safeguarding the health of Nigerians and fostering trade and the economy.

    Modernization is a continuous process and beyond 2025, NAFADC is evolving into use of Artificial Intelligence and data analytics to proactively identify food safety risks before they escalate and to effectively monitor advertisements.

    FOOD SAFETY AND VETERINARY MEDICINE AND ALLIED PRODUCTS:

    Food safety remains one of the most critical public health, economic, and development priorities for any country, and VMAP covers animal feed and crop protection products that have a direct link to food safety along the farm-to-fork continuum.

    One of the most critical modernizations to the regulatory system is the attainment of ML3, although not directly linked to food, ML3 is about strengthening systems, and when a system is strengthened, all other parts that play within that system benefit from the ripple effects.

    Modernization of NAFDAC regulatory system has influenced food safety and our processes over the last 8 years. The VMAP directorate is transforming the formation through:Collaboration on the world stage of the One Health approach.

    By ensuring that food safety practices are entrenched long before the food gets to consumers through feed quality and crop protection practices.

    Strengthening of Market Authorization process: Online and digitalized registration process has encouraged transparency and efficiencyPre-Market Control and Approval systems: This is especially important in animal feed, the control of additives, premixes, etc and has a direct effect on the quality of feed.

    This authorization and approval process is done via the Nigerian Single Window and NAPAMS Adoption of global best practices Alignment with Codex standard on Maximum Residual Limits (MRLs)Encouraging and enforcing Good Manufacturing Practices (GMP) and HACCP-based feed safety systems, thereby shifting our regulatory direction to preventive instead of reactive Implementation of risk management actions: to protect public health

    The outright ban of some pesticides, reclassification of others, and restriction of selected pesticides following assessments of their impact on human health and environmental safety.

    These actions demonstrate a shift toward preventive regulation and long-term public health protection. Decisive regulatory controls through the institution of regulatory directives to eliminate high-risk practices, such as enforcing the prohibition of use of colistin as a coccidiostat, use of gentian violet as an anti-mould agent, and the combination of more than two antibiotics in a formulation, etc.

    This represents a strong regulatory intervention to protect food safety and also support national and global efforts to combat antimicrobial resistance.Laboratory Strengthening and Residue Monitoring

    The well-equipped, accredited laboratories are capable of detecting veterinary drug residues, feed contaminants, and pesticide residues. Which has a direct impact on the safety of food Human Capacity Development

    The collaboration with some support partners, such as the Fleming Fund and the Danish Veterinary Food Administration, has contributed to the continuous investment in people, which is required for a sustainable modernization of a regulatory system.

    Where experiences and knowledge in regulatory science, risk assessment, inspection techniques, and emerging technologies are shared and transferred, where applicable.

    These learning sessions have opened up new opportunities for the future.Continuous Stakeholder Engagement Continuous engagement with farmers, veterinarians, feed manufacturers, agrochemical users, and consumers through education, workshops, and transparent communication improves compliance and public trust.

    Lifecycle Management Engagement for pesticidesThe agency introduced Initiatives such as the NAFDAC–CropLife Nigeria Stewardship Programme, which exemplify how regulators can partner with industry to promote safe pesticide distribution, use, and disposal across the entire product lifecycle.

    Strengthened Antimicrobial Resistance (AMR) initiative Institutional governance mechanisms through the establishment of an Agency-Wide One Health AMR Committee, to guide regulatory actions across human medicines, veterinary medicines, animal feed, and food.

    This platform supports the effective implementation of national action plans on AMR in NAP 2.0 and ensures alignment across departments.

    NAFDAC REGULATORY – BATTLES FROM THE ZONES:

    .The battles for NAFDAC regulatory controls are fought daily at the zones and states, be it for substandardard falsified medicines, unwholesome foods and water, diversion of chemicals and dangerous chemicals in cosmetics.

    Safeguarding the health of the citizens is the result of years of relentless work, modernization, and transformation within NAFDAC. Exaamples of nine food safety battles identified are stated below.

    The creation of a directorate structure and decentralization of food registration made these battles real because NAFDAC is always there :The third Pillar of NAFDAC Strategic Plan – Safety and Quality of Regulated Products – involes the composite battles that sometines can be life threathening.

    However, NAFDAC at the headquartes and zones have used technology, sensitization and traiming to confranot these challenges. Modernization of NAFDAC Regulatory and Drug and Food Safety and Post approval Marketing – Quality Control TestingQuality Control Testing in Market Authorization and Post Approval Safety Monitoring is a critical tool for pronouncement on quality and detection of Sub-standard medicines, particularly in a dynamic constantly evolving regulatory landscape.

    NAFDAC has seven full-size laboratories in five geographical zones, five of which have ISO 17025 certification and recertifications since 2018.

    Four mini labs are at different stages of constructions in Sokoto, Kano, Edo and Oyo States.Milestones in the Modernisation of QC Laboratory Testing – CDCL, Kaduna and Agulu, Vaccine, Biologics and Medical Devices Laboratory. Construction of new CDCL Lab in Yaba and Almost complete State-of-the-Art Vaccine Lab in Oshodi.

    Leveraging Technology and Digitalization for process improvement in the labs Upgrade of the Laboratory Information Management System; alert system, auto-generation and printing of labels, OOS process, Laboratory report generation Real-Time Environmental monitoring using the Viasala Data Logger General Transition from pre-market focused QC – Risk Based Sampling and Testing in all labs Nationwide

    Laboratory Harmonization Project; started in 2019. Harmonization of QMS of seven NAFDAC Laboratories, Joint ISO 17025:2017 Accreditation with Accreditation Body, Establishment of Intra-Laboratory Comparisons (ILC) and Inter-Laboratory Audits Expand scope of CDCL’s WHO PQ to microbiology analysis and accreditation for additional Laboratory Strategic Priorities for the Next Phase of QC Testing Sustained regional and international reliance activities;

    RCORE in QA, information sharing, reliance and collaboration; Leveraging WHO Prequalification to strengthen NAFDAC’s position as a reference Laboratory for nationally, regionally and internationally (e.g. institutions, National Regulatory Agencies, International Organizations)

    WHO Prequalification for Microbiology scopeHealth, Safety, and Environmental StewardshipAs part of modernization of NAFDAC regulatory system, the Agency continues to strengthen Health, Safety, and Environment (HSE) practices through: Renovation and modernization of laboratory complexes Improved laboratory workflows and safety systemsQuarterly health checks for staff.

    A strengthened safety culture across all laboratory operationsThese measures safeguard staff welfare and ensure sustainable operationsCall to ActionReiterate that modern regulatory systems are only as strong as QC laboratories Emphasis on QC laboratory testing as: Enablers of drug safety and cornerstones of post-approval market control.

    Need for sustained investment, collaboration, and innovation to achieve NAFDAC’s commitment to protecting public health through science-driven, modern regulatory oversight.

    Chemical Safety:   OPCW Perspectives – Achievements and Future OutlookNAFDAC safeguards public health, the environment, and national security through chemical regulations.Framework aligned with Organization for the Prohibition of Chemical Weapons (OPCW) objectives and Nigeria’s obligations under the Chemical Weapons Convention (CWC).

    By its mandate, NAFDAC regulates industrial chemicals, agrochemicals, controlled and dual-use substances. NAFDAC–OPCWIs ordinated nationally through the National Authority on Chemical &Biological Weapons Convention (NAC&BWC) and its focus areas include: Chemical analysis and laboratory verification,

    Quality management systems, Emergency preparedness and response and Oversight of toxic industrial chemicals

    Key Achievements (2018–2025) include:   Entry into OPCW Chemical Analysis Competency Tests (CCACT) Significant upgrades to chemical laboratory infrastructure Achievement of “Very Good” OPCW proficiency rating (2023)OPCW assessment of NAFDAC Central Laboratory (Lagos) Hosting of OPCW Basic Course for English-speaking African States (2025).

    Strengthened national and regional recognition of Nigeria’s chemical verification capacity Future Outlook (2026–2030):

    Pathway to OPCW Laboratory Designation Consolidation of regulatory and laboratory gains Sustained high performance in OPCW proficiency testing Strengthening of ISO/IEC 17025-compliant quality systemsIncremental upgrades of analytical instrumentation Expanded method development for scheduled and toxic industrial chemicals Continued human capacity development and inter-agency collaboration Strategic pathway toward possible OPCW laboratory designation NAFDAC has made significant progress in strengthening Nigeria’s chemical safety framework; Sustained investment and strategic partnerships are essential for future resilience and compliance.

    INVESTIGATION AND ENFORCEMENT – MODERN PERSPECTIVES:    Regulatory oversight today operates in an environment defined by globalisation, complex supply chains, evolving chemical risks, and increasingly sophisticated regulatory crimes.

    In this context, NAFDAC’s mandate to protect public health requires a regulatory system that is agile, intelligence-driven, and resilient.The Investigation and Enforcement Directorate has been central to translating regulatory policy into measurable outcomes ensuring that compliance is not optional and that chemical safety standards are enforced across the entire value chain.

    The achievements of the directorate over the last years are stated below. First, NAFDAC has progressively shifted from a predominantly reactive enforcement posture to a risk-based, intelligence-led regulatory enforcement model. This is in line with the WHO Global Benchmarking Tool as it relates to Market Control function.

    This transition has enhanced the strategic use of limited resources, improved targeting of high-risk products and operators, and strengthened deterrence against substandard, falsified, and unsafe regulated products.Secondly, the Directorate has benefited from the gradual integration of technology into regulatory enforcement.

    Digital registration systems, improved product traceability, electronic documentation, and data-supported inspections have enhanced transparency, accountability, and the legal robustness of enforcement actions.Thirdly, inter-agency collaboration has been institutionalised as a regulatory necessity rather than an option.

    Strategic partnerships with Customs, security agencies, environmental regulators, and subnational structures have significantly expanded NAFDAC’s enforcement reach, particularly at ports, borders, and high-risk distribution corridors.A particularly notable illustration of this progress was the Open Drug Market (ODM) enforcement operation conducted in February 2026, which stands as one of the most coordinated and impactful market sanitisation exercises in recent years.

    The operation successfully dismantled entrenched distribution networks involved in the trade of falsified and unregistered medicines, resulting in extensive seizures and the closure of illicit outlets.

    Specifically, the operation led to the arrest of forty (40) suspects, with five (5) cases currently undergoing prosecution. In addition, one hundred and thirty-eight (138) truckloads of substandard and falsified medicines were evacuated from circulation. To conclusively eliminate the risk of re-entry into the supply chain, over One Trillion Naira (₦1,000,000,000,000) worth of seized substandard and falsified drugs were destroyed in April 2026.

    This decisive action sent an unequivocal message that illicit drug markets have no safe haven under a modern, intelligence-driven regulatory enforcement regime.Similarly, the August enforcement action against the “In-Call Pack” phenomenon demonstrated NAFDAC’s capacity to adapt enforcement strategies to emerging and unconventional regulatory threats. By decisively addressing this evolving pattern of illicit and fake regulated product distribution, the Agency reaffirmed its commitment to protecting public health even in non-traditional and digitally enabled supply channels.Finally, there has been measurable improvement in institutional professionalism and operational discipline.

    The standardisation of operating procedures, strengthened evidence management, and focused staff capacity development have enhanced the credibility and authority of Investigation and Enforcement as a core regulatory function of the Agency.The number of arrests made in 2025 was one hundred and fourteen.

    The number sent to legal was sixteen Future Outlook:Technological lag may undermine enforcement effectiveness if regulatory tools do not keep pace with increasingly sophisticated criminal networks.Skills and capacity gaps may emerge if continuous professional development particularly in chemical risk assessment, digital forensics, intelligence analysis, and emerging risk detection, is not institutionalised.Judicial and prosecutorial constraints may reduce deterrence if enforcement outcomes are not consistently translated into timely, conclusive, and well coordinated legal sanctions.In addition, resource sustainability, including funding, logistics, infrastructure, and staff welfare, remains a critical determinant of regulatory resilience and operational continuity.

    Modernisation is a culture of governance which is Pillar I in NAFDAC Strategic Plan.

    NAFDAC DIGITAL TRANSFORMATION JOURNEY AND MODERNIZATION OF REGULATORY CONTROL:  The Agency adopted a phased, regulation‑first approach anchored on transparency, efficiency, and public health. Key milestones include:Modernized Corporate Website – gateway for information and stakeholder engagement.

    NAFDAC Automated Product Administration and Monitoring System (NAPAMS) supports the end-to-end regulation of products by providing a unified digital platform for online product registration covering foods, drugs, cosmetics, medical devices, chemicals, packaged water, and other regulated products.

    The NAPAMS platform was recently upgraded to enable such processes that include:The submission and processing of applications through structured documentation upload, validation, and assessment workflowsImproved turnaround time and auditability of regulatory workflowsEnhanced traceability of regulated products throughout their lifecycle Enhanced reporting to government and international partnersDossier Management System (DMS) is a specialized digital platform used to manage the submission, review, assessment, storage, and lifecycle management of regulatory dossiers, especially for medicines and other complex regulated products.

    Electronic Clinical Trials Application Platform (eCTAP) is a digital system used to manage the submission, review, approval, and oversight of clinical trial applications in Nigeria.Laboratory Information Management System (LIMS) is a digital platform used by the Agency to manage laboratory testing, sample analysis, and quality control activities across its laboratories.Ports Inspection Data Capture And Risk Management System (PIDCARMS) is a platform deployed to regulate and control imported regulated products before they are cleared at Nigeria’s ports, airports, and land borders.

    NAFDAC Green Book Platform is an official digital reference platform used by the Agency to publish and provide public access to approved and registered pharmaceutical products in Nigeria.

    NAFDAC Traceability Information System (NTIS) is a digital platform based on GS1 technology to enable end-to-end traceability of regulated products across the supply chain, particularly medicines and other health products. The system captures and manages product identification, serialization, and movement data in line with GS1 standards, supporting supply chain visibility from manufacture or importation to distribution and dispensing.

    NTIS enhances regulatory surveillance, post-market monitoring, and rapid response to substandard and falsified products, while providing a trusted data backbone for pharmacovigilance, recalls, and regulatory decision-making. It was used to monitor the supply chain of millions of doses of COVID-19 vaccines, now being used for narcotincs and maternal, newborn and child commidities. NAFDAC is leading the NRAs in Africa in the use of the technology.National Single Window Integration

    NAFDAC systems has an seamless electronic data exchange with Nigeria Customs Service bt enabling importers and exporters to submit regulatory and customs information through a single digital interface rather than multiple platforms..

    Microsoft Office 365-driven Communication and Collaboration Tool: NAFDAC enhanced collaboration with the adoption of Microsoft SharePoint platforms form Microsoft Office 365 ecosystem and standardize communication through corporate email.

    These efforts supported NAFDAC’s attainment and sustainance of WHO GBT Maturity Level 3 status.Our most strategic achievement is the Integrated Regulatory Information Management System (IRIMS), unifying regulatory data and decision‑making across the Agency.Impact of DigitalizationEfficiency: Faster product registration and approvals, elimination of manual bottlenecks.Transparency:

    Digital audit trails and applicant tracking reduce uncertainty.Data Integrity: Centralized systems ensure accuracy and compliance.Public Health: Quicker access to safe products, stronger surveillance against substandard goods.Resilience: Continuity of regulation during emergencies.

    The Road Ahead :  We are moving from digitalization to intelligent regulation. Priorities include:Full consolidation of IRIMS.Advanced analytics and dashboards.Artificial Intelligence for triaging, document review, and regulatory chatbots.Stronger interoperability with national and regional systems.Cybersecurity and data governance as core safeguards.Continuous capacity building for staff.

    All the transformative changes and modernization presented in this media parley couldn’t be possible without or digitizationS

    TAFFING, INFRASTRUCTURE, WORKFORCE MOTIVATION AND DISCIPLINE:  Engaging individuals with the right skill sets for regulatory duties such as Food scientists, Pharmacists, Doctors, Veterinarians, Lawyers and other persons with science background is the engine on which modernization of.

    A regulatory runs.The Management has placed emphasis on this, and President Bola Ahmed Tinubu (GCFR) has responded positively to increasing our staff strength. Deliberate effort to attract persons with second degrees – Masters and PhD. The staffing engagement focused on quality over quantity.

    The Agency has seen a leap in infrastructural development since 2018. Usually, the Agency office accommodations are donated at the Federal Government Secretariat Complex which is not suitable for the Agency’s operations because they cannot be easily accessed by clients. The Management embarked on the construction of state offices around the country.

    Thus far, twelve state offices including Yaba Central Drug Laboratory have been completed while thirteen zonal/state offices, laboratories are under construction and Modern working tools or infrastructure like computers (~1350), furniture are provided to facilitate the work. New vehicles (>140) have been procured to enhance regulatory activities.

    This has ended the tradition of relying on those regulated to transport officers to their facilities.A well-motivated and disciplines workforce is the core strength of any organisation.

    The NAFDAC management knows this too well.Staff welfare is one area the Agency has placed a high premium on because when the staff are motivated and happy, they put in their best to ensure that the mandate is achieved.Capacity building and staff development have been provided to motivate staff.

    A special Staff Development Programme was instituted in 2021 for staff who wish to pursue higher degrees while still working. It is an arrangement with some universities and fully funded by the Agency.

    The idea is to ensure that officers approving regulated products – food or drug know the science behind the products.To date more than twenty-five (25) staff are in graduate programmes at different universities pursuing MSc and PhD while on the job full time.The management has responded to staff allowances as part of motivation.

    Payment of these allowances have done much to improve the social economic wellbeing of the staff and rekindled their resolve to work harder and improve productivity.

    While staff welfare stands as the carrot, staff discipline is the stick the management employs to ensure that staff operate and behave within the acceptable bounds as stipulated in Public Service Rules and the Agency’s code of conduct.

    Infractions are swiftly punished as exemplary conducts and exceptional performance are rewarded.

    As a regulatory Agency discipline is critical to the success of NAFDAC in the onerous task of safeguarding the health of the nation, which is enunciated in our motto; ‘’Costumer-Focus, Agency Minded”. As stated earlier, without a motivated and discipline staff there cannot be modernization of a regulatory agency. The evidence shows.

    Thank youProf Mojisola Christianah Adeyeye, FAS Director General, NAFDAC

  • Remembering NAFDAC’s Historic and Audacious December 2024 Nationwide Assaults on Counterfeiters, Fake Drug Peddlers 

    Remembering NAFDAC’s Historic and Audacious December 2024 Nationwide Assaults on Counterfeiters, Fake Drug Peddlers 

     

    (Prof. Mojisola Adeyeye, NAFDAC Director General, Stern, Firm and Courageous)

    (NAFDAC Operatives in action)

     – In Aba alone, NAFDAC raided over 240 shops turned factories where the harmful products were being produced and marketed,” the NAFDAC Boss disclosed.

    – Prof. Adeyeye, the NAFDAC Boss, now fondly called – Nigeria’s Iron Lady, disclosed that the Cemetery market in Aba ”is popular, dreaded and is, hitherto, the safe haven for the largest cartel ring for the manufacture of fake wines and beverages in Africa.”

    By Biola Lawal
    For the teeming traders at the popular Eziukwu Market in Aba, Abia State, Monday, December 16, 2024 began like just another day. The sun rising peacefully and shining, its glow beaming down the buslling market. The usual huzzle and buzzle of the day was gathering momentum.

    Little did any trader envisage that a looming nemesis was about to descend. A nemesis coming head-on against embedded evil, either-to thought untouchable, uncombatable, a no go area.

    (NAFDAC Operatives on duty)

    Suddenly, operatives of the National Agency for Food and Drug Administration and Control (NAFDAC), acting on firm directives from their  Generalismo,  Director General, Prof. Mojisola Adeyeye, back at the Headquarters in Abuja, swooped on the unsuspecting traders.

    Backed and Fortified with full force by the Office of the National Security Adviser (ONSA), the NAFDAC operatives sternly and methodically seized and confiscated dangerous, counterfeited, fake and adulterated medicines, cosmetics and related substances.

    Operating swiftly and firmly, the NAFDAC operatives shook Eziukwu Market. They  confiscated various expired and fake products worth about N5 Billion during the operation which lasted two days –  December 16 and 17, 2024 in Aba.

    Tagged  ”Operation Clean up Aba,  NAFDAC
    sealled the Cemetery Market, the Second Time in Two Years in  the bold move to safeguard public health,. According to  security sources, the  Cemetery market in Aba was regarded as the most dreaded haven of wines and beverages counterfeiters.

    (NAFDAC DG in a tough look, warns  counterfeiters – No place to hide for agents of death)

    Prof. Adeyeye, the NAFDAC Boss, now fondly called – Nigeria’s Iron Lady, disclosed that ”the Cemetery market is popular, dreaded and is, hitherto, the safe haven for the largest cartel ring for the manufacture of fake wines and beverages in Africa.”

    (Prof. Adeyeye radiating happiness at the strings of NAFDAC operational successes against fake drug peddlers, etc)

    Prof. Adeyeye said that the decisive enforcement operation was conducted on the Cemetery market as a crucial move to curb the circulation of fake and substandard wine and beverages in Nigeria.

    The NAFDAC Boss noted that the December 2024 action  ”is the most audacious since the history of the market with specific zones barricaded with iron welding and access gates locked”.

    Commenting on the successful operation then, Dr. Martins Iluyomade, NAFDAC South -East Director, had described the Aba market as a hub for counterfeit and substandard products, and  expressed dismay at then continued illegal activities, despite a previous undertaking signed by market leaders in December 2023 to expose counterfeiters.

    The successful enforcement operation in Aba was  a prelude to similarly tough and decisive ones undertaken by NAFDAC operatives in Onitsha, in Anambra State and Idumota in Lagos.

    Around the same time, NAFDAC again successfully smashed an illegal factory producing unregistered cosmetic products in Iba area of Lagos. This followed Prof. Adeyeye’s Stern directive to NAFDAC offices nationwide to increase the tempo of the Agency’s battle against counterfeiters and adulterators of regulated products to safeguard public health.

    The increased successes in Lagos was attributed also to improved and extensive surveillance intelligence efforts by operatives of the Agency,

    While the heat was on. NAFDAC again struck in Abuja, sealing a Chinese supermarket for allegedly selling goods labelled in Chinese language without  proper notification, among other infractions.

    Around the same time, the Agency recorded another major success, shutting rice shops resulting in seizure of N5 billion counterfeit products in Nasarawa and Abuja.

    In the Nasarawa and Abuja enforcement operations, NAFDAC shut down eight rice shops and a warehouse in Karu Local Government Area of Nasarawa State.

    The operation, which also extended to Wuse and Garki markets in Abuja, led to the seizure of over 1,600 bags of counterfeit rice valued at approximately N5 billion.

    Officials uncovered counterfeit rice repackaged in branded bags, including popular names like Big Bull, Royal Stallion, and Tomato Aposo, designed to deceive consumers.

    During the enforcement operation, led by Mr. Kenneth Azikiwe, Director of the FCT Directorate of NAFDAC, at the Karu facility, empty branded rice bags were also discovered.

    Commenting further on the highly successful major Aba, Onitsha and Lagos operations,  Prof. Adeyeye said that the operation, which was carried out in conjunction with a large contingent of the military, DSS and Nigeria Police personnel in a rare display of inter-agency cooperation, was a follow up to a similar raid enforced in December 2023.

    ‘:Some of the nefarious activities of the counterfeiters included the manufacturing of all kinds of adulterated products especially different kinds of wine from a wide variety of brands.

    The faked products ranged from Seaman Schnapps, Henessy, Four Cousins Carlo Rossi, Jenney, Chelsea London Dry Gin, Schnapp Dry Gin, McDowells and Black Labels Gordons.

    (NAFDAC Boss, the indefatigable, incorruptible)

    Other counterfeited products were; Martell, Campari, Smirnoff ice, Eva Non-Alcoholic Drink, Evra Non-Alcoholic Drink, Cartel among others.

    ”As a consequence of the extensive operation, the agency raided over 240 shops turned factories where the harmful products were being produced and marketed,” the NAFDAC Boss disclosed.

    ”The shops turned factories are very filthy, using water from very unhygienic sources, harmful chemicals, saccharin, colouring, dirty recycled bottles and cloned packaging materials of other brands,” Prof. Adeyeye narrated.

    ”The adulteration of alcoholic beverages by criminal elements in the country is done by mixing of cheaper sources of sugar and starch besides grapes or fruit, among other harmful chemicals unsuitable for human consumption,” She stated.

    Prof. Adeyeye stated further that over 1500 cartons of the fake and substandard products were destroyed during the operation.

    ”The street value of the confiscated and destroyed fake products in 2023 is estimated at over seven hundred and fifty million naira only. (N750,000,000),” She said, adding, however, that the estimated value of products mopped up during the December 16, 2024, operation is five billion naira.

    (NAFDAC Operatives in action, often risking their lives to safeguard the health of Nigerians)

    ‘:The products being revalidated and mopped up included: Soft and carbonated drinks such as Fanta, Coca ColaSchweppes, Lacasera, Sprite, Hollandia Yoghurt, Super Commando Energy Drink, Feyrouz and Amstel Malta.

    ”Aside from drinks, notable fake home use beverages such as: Peak Sachet Milk, Cowbell Sachet Milk, Peak Chocolate Drink, Miksi Sachet Milk, Cadbury Chocolate Drink and Ovaltine adulterated versions,” Prof. Adeyeye disclosed.

    Prior to the evacuation of the products by NAFDAC, they were being produced in the market and neatly packaged and sold to unsuspecting consumers, the NAFDAC Boss said.

    Prof. Adeyeye had also, commended Governor Alex otti for his support saying;
    ”NAFDAC management appreciates the support from the Government of Abia state led by His Excellency Governor Alex Otti for his unwavering support for this project OPERATION CLEAN UP ABA”.

    The Mayor of Aba south and the interim management committee of the market and other stakeholders have been working assiduously with NAFDAC on the project leading to another discovery of three major warehouses stockpiling expired HOLLANDIA YOGHURT for revalidation on the 22nd of January 2025, She had disclosed.

    ”NAFDAC wishes to assure the public of her determination to safeguard the health of the nation and enjoins the general public to report any suspected fake and substandard regulated product to the nearest NAFDAC office,” Prof. Adeyeye stressed.

    commentator on social media (X) simply identified as Bamiji, had commended the NAFDAC efforts, urging it to always publicize the names of culprits apprehended.

    NAFDAC DG. Prof. Mojisola Adeyeye delivering her address

    He wrote:
    ‘:Can you (NAFDAC) pls be posting the full info of those culprits like EFCC is doing? Including their snapshot. This is getting too much.

    ‘:We need to let them and their family know the gravity of what they are doing.

    I mean a lot of lives are endangered from such consumption.”

    After the dust has settled in all the theatre of NAFDAC enforcement operations, Prof. Adeyeye declared that over 2500 traders with 3500 shops who have come forward for necessary regulatory procedure and paid the investigative charges have resumed their normal activity in Ogbogwu market. There is unconditional opening of shops.

    She said that NAFDAC would continue to ensure that all medical products – medicines, vaccines, medical devices and others being used in Nigeria are of good quality, safe, and efficacious.

    ‘:We will continue to provide assurances that these commodities are well monitored to avoid the deaths of pregnant women, children, and the vulnerable.

    ”Through this, we will be improving the quality of life and life expectancy of the citizenry, while reducing the incidence of untimely deaths of adults living with chronic diseases such as hypertension, diabetes.

    ‘:We wish to assure the public that NAFDAC will continue to work within the purview of her mandate.   NA FDAC: Safeguarding the Health of the Nation (FLOWERBUDNEWS)


    About Flowerbudnews

    Established by Hon.  Biola Lawal, a former Acting Managing Director of the News Agency of Nigeria (NAN), FLOWERBUDNEWS is a consortium of active veteran journalists, experienced Multimedia broadcast experts and image makers. We are drawn from both public and private sectors of Nigeria’s media Industry with a common  determination to enhance the practice of responsible journalism..

    Lawal, on his part, is also a former Honourable Commissioner for Information,Youth, Sports and Culture of Osun state, his home state.

    Biola Lawal had also successfully served two tenures as Press Secretary to the ECOMOG Force Commander in Liberia during the Liberian and Sierra Leone Civil wars. He was an outstanding NAN Defence and War Correspondent for many years.

    The retired NAN Acting Boss holds the honour of being the only journalist that served two terms on the ECOMOG international assignment due to his high professionalism and decency.

    He is a Co-Author of the book; ECOMOG, A BOLD ATTEMPT AT REGIONAL m l! Edited Mrs Magaret Voght.  The book remains the most. factual, detailed and authentic book on the ECOWAS sponsored ECOMOG Military operation.

  • NAFDAC DG Vows to Enforce Ban on Alcohol in Sachets, Small Plastic Bottles by Dec. 2025

    NAFDAC DG Vows to Enforce Ban on Alcohol in Sachets, Small Plastic Bottles by Dec. 2025

     

    (NAFDAC Director General, Prof. Mojisola Adeyeye)

     

    By Biola Lawal
    Abuja (FLOWERBUDNEWS): The Director General of the National Agency for Food and Drug Administration and Control (NAFDAC), Prof. Mojisola Adeyeye, has vowed to effectively enforce the total ban on the production and sale of alcoholic beverages in sachets and small-volume PET/glass bottles (below 200ml) by December 2025,

    FLOWERBUDNEWS reports that Prof Adeyeye, who made the declaration on Tuesday in Abuja, said that the reaffirmed resolve was in line with the recent directive of the Senate of the Federal Republic of Nigeria.

    .”This decisive action, ordered by the Nigerian Senate and backed by the Federal Ministry of Health and Social Welfare, underscores the Agency’s statutory mandate to safeguard public health and protect vulnerable populations—particularly children, adolescents, and young adults—from the harmful use of alcohol,” Prof. Adeyeye stressed.

    She disclosed that ”the proliferation of high-alcohol-content beverages in sachets and small containers has made such products easily accessible, affordable, and concealable, leading to widespread misuse and addiction among minors and commercial drivers.”

    The NAFDAC Boss warned alcohol abuse as a public health menace ‘:has been linked to increased incidences of domestic violence, road accidents, school dropouts, and social vices across communities.

    ”In December 2018, NAFDAC, the Federal Ministry of Health, and the Federal Competition and Consumer Protection Commission (FCCPC) signed a five-year Memorandum of Understanding (MoU) with the Association of Food, Beverage and Tobacco Employers (AFBTE) and the Distillers and Blenders Association of Nigeria (DIBAN) to phase out sachet and small-volume alcohol packaging by January 31, 2024.

    ”The moratorium was later extended to December 2025 to allow industry operators to exhaust old stock and reconfigure production lines.NAFDAC emphasizes that the current Senate resolution aligns with the spirit and letter of that agreement and with Nigeria’s commitment to the World Health Organization’s Global Strategy to Reduce the Harmful Use of Alcohol (WHA63.13, 2010), to which Nigeria is a signatory,” She said.

    According to Prof. Mojisola Christianah Adeyeye, Director-General, NAFDAC:“This ban is not punitive; it is protective. It is aimed at safeguarding the health and future of our children and youth.

    “‘ The decision is rooted in scientific evidence and public health considerations. We cannot continue to sacrifice the well-being of Nigerians for short-term economic gain.

    ”The health of a nation is its true wealth.”NAFDAC reiterates that only two categories of alcoholic beverages are affected by this regulation—spirit drinks packaged in sachets and small-volume PET/glass bottles below 200ml.

    The Agency calls on all stakeholders, including manufacturers, distributors, and retailers, to comply fully with the phase-out deadline, as no further extension will be entertained beyond December 2025

    .Prof. Adeyeye assured that NAFDAC ”will continue to work collaboratively with the Federal Ministry of Health and Social Welfare, the Federal Competition and Consumer Protection Commission (FCCPC), and the National Orientation Agency (NOA) to implement nationwide sensitization campaigns on the health and social dangers associated with alcohol misuse.”

    ”NAFDAC remains resolute in its mission to ensure that only safe, wholesome, and properly regulated products are available to Nigerians.
    (FLOWERBUDNEWS)

  • NAFDAC Makes Bold Move to Further Safeguard Public Health; Launches Strategy for Trans-Fatty Acid Regulation

    NAFDAC Makes Bold Move to Further Safeguard Public Health; Launches Strategy for Trans-Fatty Acid Regulation

     

     

     

    – Nigeria is determined to protect the health of its citizens and secure a food supply free from the dangers of trans-fatty acids – Prof. Adeyeye

     

     

    By Biola Lawal
    FLOWERBUDNEWS: The Director General of the National Agency for Food and Drug Administration and Control (NAFDAC), Prof. Mojisola Adeyeye has reaffirmed the Agency’s commitment to safeguard health of Nigerians by eliminating a dangerous diets linked to heart disease, stroke, and premature death

    Prof. Adeyeye expressed the resolve while launching Strategy and Roadmap for Trans-Fatty Acid (TFA) Regulation in Nigeria, a statement by Sayo Akintola, NAFDAC Resident Media Consultant disclosed on Sunday.

    The NAFDAC Boss disclosed that unregulated Trans-Fatty Acid (TFA) posses dietary health dangers capable of causing heart disease, stroke, and premature death.

    Prof. Adeyeye announced that Nigeria had already taken bold steps, including setting regulatory limits of no more than 2 grams of industrially produced trans fat per 100 grams of total fat or oil.

    ” In recognition of this effort, Nigeria was named by WHO in 2023 as one of seven countries that had adopted best-practice TFA elimination policies,” She recalled.

    The newly launched roadmap outlines a phased approach focused on industry reformulation, laboratory strengthening, compliance monitoring, public education, and cross-sector collaboration. With support from partners such as Resolve to Save Lives, WHO, and other stakeholders, She stated.

    The NAFDAC Boss said that the Agency had also expanded its laboratory capacity to analyse TFAs, marking significant progress toward full implementation.

    Prof. Adeyeye called on government agencies, industry, civil society, and consumers to work together to achieve WHO validation of Nigeria’s programme.

    “Eliminating industrially produced trans fats is possible, achievable, and urgent. With this roadmap, Nigeria is determined to protect the health of its citizens and secure a food supply free from the dangers of trans-fatty acids,” she affirmed.

    NAFDAC – Safeguarding the Health of the Nation ( Flowerbudnews)

  • NAFDAC Boss Charges Manufacturers to Invest in Local Human Vaccine Production in Nigeria

    NAFDAC Boss Charges Manufacturers to Invest in Local Human Vaccine Production in Nigeria

     


    .
    – We have Strengthened Regulatory System for Vaccines, Biologics, and Medical Devices Through Restructuring and Global Benchmarking.- DG

     

    – Thanks President Bola Ahmed Tinubu, (GCFR,) for encouraging local manufacturing as part of the Renewed Hope Agenda.

     

    By Biola Lawal
    The Director General of the National Agency for Food and Drug Administration and Control, NAFDAC, Prof. Mojisola Adeyeye, has charged manufacturers of pharmaceutical products in the country to begin investing in the production of human vaccines locally.

    She warned that Nigeria should not wait for another pandemic before it gets prepared and avoid being caught unawares, as witnessed during COVID-19, when the country depended on international donors to survive the scourge.

    Prof. Adeyeye made the call in a public statement to pharmaceutical products makers on the urgent need to begin production of vaccines locally with NAFDAC’s success in taken the country to WHO Maturity Level 3 since 2022 and other international recognitions achieved, Sayo Akintola, NAFDAC Media Consultant disclosed.


    .
    Counseling Investors, Prof. Adeyeye stressed:
    ‘When I came to NAFDAC, we had the Registration and Regulatory Affairs Directorate, which was in charge of registration of all NAFDAC-regulated products, meaning the registration of food, drugs, cosmetics, medical devices, herbal medicines, vaccines, veterinary products, pesticides, and other finished chemicals was under one Director, which made the system susceptible to ineffectiveness and corruption,’ she said.

    ‘I first carved out the Food Registration and Regulatory Affairs Directorate, and what was left over was still huge,” adding: ”‘if you want good governance and leadership, you must have governable units, governable groups.

    ” One Director overseeing seven regulated products will not achieve the necessary efficiency. That was why we knew that we had to separate vaccines and medical devices from the Drug Registration and Regulatory Affairs Directorate.

    ’ NAFDAC became Maturity Level 3 in 2022 for medicines and imported vaccines. For NAFDAC to be benchmarked for vaccines, biologics and medical devices,” Prof. Adeyeye stressed.

    She explained further; ”we had to have a separate Directorate headed by a director to ensure that we align with international best practices, and we are operating at the same level as advanced countries of the world.’

    The NAFDAC Boss disclosed that the Agency had to separate Vaccines, Biologics, and Medical Devices in November 2024 to form one directorate, following the Head of Service of the Federation’s assessment, evaluation, and sanction, to ensure that it would be a viable Directorate with operating units.

    The DG expressed the hope that the nation would manufacture vaccines before she leaves office, saying that ‘It will be exciting news for me, because during the pandemic we were too dependent on foreign countries. We couldn’t get any vaccines unless from outside the country.

    ” That was when the preparedness for epidemics became a reality for us.’She stated, adding that the Agency now has guidelines for emergency preparedness for epidemics and pandemics.

    She however, warned that if there’s another pandemic now and Nigeria is not yet manufacturing human vaccines, despite having manufactured veterinary vaccines since 1924, the country will again be at the mercy of other countries.


    .
    ‘During the pandemic, we ran up and down to see whether we could start manufacturing vaccines, but things did not work out,’ she said, adding: ‘we must decide as a country that we will not be too dependent on others. We will manufacture our own.’

    According to her,” there has been a movement to do that, but this has not come to reality. ‘That’s why I pray that before my tenure is over, we will be manufacturing vaccines.’

    According to her, any country that wants to manufacture vaccines that will be pre-qualified by the WHO must have a regulatory system with at least Maturity Level 3 status.

    She added that the fact that we now have ML3 for medicines and imported vaccines in 2022 brought us to the discussion of manufacturing vaccines.

    (NAFDAC Operatives in action during an enforcement operation)

    She explained that, as a country, we had to fulfil the requirements of nine modules in the WHO Global Benchmarking Tool, one of which is Licensing Establishments for the Pharmacy Council of Nigeria (PCN), and NAFDAC had the remaining eight.

    Prof. Adeyeye pointed out that the ML3 we achieved was for seven of the eight, emphasizing that we have not been benchmarked for locally manufactured vaccines.

    She noted that NAFDAC is the only National Regulatory Agency (NRA) in sub-Saharan Africa that has an in-house laboratory for vaccines, biologics, and medical devices.

    Prof. Adeyeye said that the South African Health Products Regulatory Authority (SAHPRA) has a laboratory for vaccines but contracted it out to private operators.

    ‘We are working towards getting our ML3 for locally manufactured vaccines. We already have ML3 for medicines and imported vaccines since 2022. WHO came last year, they saw everything that we have as a regulatory agency on indicators for vaccine Lot Release; we have almost satisfied everything except that the country must manufacture vaccines because it’s when we manufacture vaccines that we can do local facility inspections.’

    She said NAFDAC has been conducting Lot Release testing on imported vaccines in her lab for years, adding that the WHO wants to know that we can also effectively monitor locally manufactured ones.

    ‘This is where we are as a country, and I pray that within a short time, we will be able to manufacture our own vaccines.

    The Director General further emphasized: ”we have the capability to manufacture vaccines. The country can start with “Fill and Finish” while planning on the greenfield. We have sound scientists.

    ” We have our President Bola Ahmed Tinubu, GCFR, who is encouraging local manufacturing as part of the Renewed Hope Agenda.

    Now is the time to get it done.’ NAFDAC – Safeguarding the Health of the Nation.

    Speaking in the same vein, Mrs. Khadijah Ade-Abolade, Director of Vaccines, Biologics, and Medical Devices Registration and Regulatory Affairs, stated that the federal government is playing a strategic role to ensure that local vaccine manufacturing takes off in the country.

    She stated that the policy has been established, and support is being provided to ensure that vaccine manufacturing takes off in Nigeria.

    According to her, the important thing is the regulatory framework, which is already established by NAFDAC and is well-functioning for imported vaccines, and which will also be applied to local vaccines when manufacturing starts in the country.

    ‘All the required regulatory functions for the regulation of vaccines are already available. We have our market authorisation, which is the registration that we do; the Inspectorate arm of the Agency conducts regulatory inspections.

    We have Clinical trial oversight, which is crucial for vaccine regulation, as well as Post-Market Surveillance and Pharmacovigilance, because we need to monitor the safety and efficacy of our vaccines.

    Mrs. Ade-Abolade maintained that the regulatory system for local vaccine manufacture is already well established in the country, stressing that ‘We are just waiting for the manufacturing operations to start by the manufacturers.’
    (Flowerbudnews)