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NAFDAC Has Legal Authority to Enforce Alcohol Ban, Health Ministry Tells Court

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The Federal Ministry of Health and Social Welfare has told the Federal High Court that NAF­DAC is legally empowered to enforce the prohibition on the production and sale of alcoholic beverages packaged in sachets, PET bottles, and glass containers below 200 millilitres.

The ministry’s submission has underscored the govern­ment’s determination to regu­late consumption and strengthen public health safeguards, the Na­tional Agency for Food and Drug Administration and Control (NAFDAC) said in a statement on Thursday.

In a counter-affidavit filed on February 23, 2026, the ministry, through its counsel, Jumoke Motilayo Falaye, said it neither interferes with nor controls NAF­DAC’s enforcement decisions, stressing that the ministry is not an enforcement arm of the Fed­eral Government.

The ministry explained that NAFDAC is a statutory agency established under the NAFDAC Act with clearly defined regulato­ry and enforcement powers over food, drugs, and related products, including alcoholic beverages.

It argued that it lacks the le­gal authority to direct, restrain, or halt NAFDAC from carrying out its statutory mandate.

The ministry further stated that the Minister of Health and Social Welfare has not granted any further extension of the mora­torium on the enforcement of existing regulations, including the sachet alcohol ban, the state­ment noted.

According to the affidavit, NAFDAC’s enforcement powers are derived from Sections 5 and 30 of the NAFDAC Act and oth­er applicable regulations, adding that all decisions relating to en­forcement fall squarely within the agency’s jurisdiction.

The ministry also dismissed claims of ministerial interference in NAFDAC’s enforcement process­es as speculative and unsupport­ed by evidence.

The suit, marked FHC/L/ CS/2568/25, was instituted by the Socio-Economic Rights and Accountability Project (SERAP) against the Minister of Health and Social Welfare as the first defendant and the Attorney-Gen­eral of the Federation, represent­ing the Federal Government and the Office of the Secretary to the Government of the Federation, as the second defendant.

The action was filed on SERAP’s behalf by Mofesomo Tayo-Oyetibo (SAN), alongside other lawyers from Tayo Oyeti­bo LP.

SERAP is seeking declara­tions that the sachet alcohol ban is a valid regulation under the NAFDAC Act and that the Minister of Health lacks the le­gal authority to grant or extend any moratorium on its enforce­ment.

It is also urging the court to affirm that federal authorities must not interfere with NAFDAC’s enforcement responsibilities and must ensure the nationwide implementation of the ban.

Specifically, SERAP is asking for an injunction restraining the defendants and their agents from extending any moratorium on the prohibition, as well as a per­petual injunction preventing any directive capable of hindering NAFDAC from enforcing the ban in line with its statutory duties.

In its originating summons dated 15 December 2025, SERAP argued that continued delay in enforcing the ban violates exist­ing health and regulatory laws, as well as prior agreements sup­porting a nationwide prohibition of sachet alcohol.

The organisation maintained that sachet alcohol, often inex­pensive, highly potent, and wide­ly accessible, has contributed sig­nificantly to rising alcohol abuse, particularly among young people and low-income communities.

(Independent)

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