The Customs NAFDAC illicit pharmaceuticals partnership has deepened, with the Nigeria Customs Service handing over a large consignment of seized Tramadol and Natizol tablets to the drug regulator to safeguard public health. The handover, reported by National Accord and Ships & Ports, is the latest step in a widening campaign against unsafe and smuggled medicines circulating in the country.

The Customs NAFDAC illicit pharmaceuticals handover
The Federal Operations Unit (FOU) Zone A of the Nigeria Customs Service handed the seized tablets to the National Agency for Food and Drug Administration and Control on June 16, 2026. Officials said the transfer was carried out on the directive of the Comptroller-General of Customs as part of renewed efforts to intensify the fight against drug smuggling across the South-West region.
Customs described the exercise as a significant step in a collective national effort to disrupt trafficking networks. By passing seized products to NAFDAC, the two agencies ensure the drugs are tested, documented and destroyed through the proper regulatory channel rather than leaking back into the open market where they could endanger more people.
Why Tramadol and counterfeits are a concern
Tramadol abuse has become a major public-health issue in parts of Nigeria, where the painkiller is often sold without prescription and consumed at dangerous doses. Smuggled and counterfeit pharmaceuticals carry added risks because their strength and purity are unknown, exposing users to overdose, organ damage and addiction. Young people in particular have been drawn into misuse of the drug.
NAFDAC has repeatedly warned that fake and substandard products undermine trust in the wider medicine supply. The agency has noted that cosmetics, food and beverages account for a large share of counterfeit goods, but unsafe drugs remain among the most dangerous categories it polices because the harm they cause is immediate and sometimes fatal.
A pattern of joint operations
The handover fits a broader pattern of inter-agency cooperation. In recent months, Customs and NAFDAC have intercepted illicit drug consignments in Rivers State valued in the billions of naira, while the NDLEA and NAFDAC have praised Seme Customs for synergy in tackling narcotics and unwholesome pharmaceutical smuggling. Officials say intelligence sharing is central to dismantling criminal supply chains.
By coordinating seizures, transfers and destruction, the agencies aim to close gaps that smugglers exploit at ports and land borders. Each handover also builds an evidence trail that can support prosecutions and tighten enforcement at known trafficking corridors, making it harder for networks to simply reroute their goods elsewhere.
What it means for Nigerians
For ordinary Nigerians, the campaign is meant to reduce the volume of dangerous medicines circulating in markets and pharmacies. Authorities urge the public to buy drugs only from licensed outlets, check for NAFDAC registration numbers, and report suspicious products. Strong enforcement, they argue, protects both individual users and the credibility of the country’s health system.
The agencies say more seizures and handovers are expected as operations expand across the country. Sustained pressure, they add, is the only way to shrink a trade that adapts quickly whenever enforcement eases at any single point along the supply chain.
Viorah TV is reporting this Customs NAFDAC illicit pharmaceuticals matter factually, without prejudging any individuals who may face investigation. The wider goal, officials insist, is a safer marketplace where Nigerians can trust that the medicines on the shelves will help them rather than harm them.