Southwest Nigeria has been identified as the epicentre of Africa’s largest and most diversified counterfeit consumer goods economy, according to a new report by the DAWN Commission.
The report, titled "Southwest Nigeria Under Siege: The Counterfeit Shadow Economy," states that "Southwest Nigeria is not merely experiencing a pharmaceutical safety crisis. It is the epicentre of Africa's largest and most diversified counterfeit consumer goods economy, one that kills Nigerians, destroys legitimate industry, repels investment, and operates with near-total impunity."
According to the report, fake drugs, adulterated beverages, toxic cosmetics, substandard vehicle spare parts, and counterfeit electronics flow through a sophisticated shadow economy embedded in the region's most prominent commercial markets.
The DAWN Commission’s report describes the crisis as multi-sectoral, spanning pharmaceuticals, food and beverages, cosmetics, vehicle spare parts, and electronics.
It highlights that counterfeit goods now account for 40% of products in Nigeria, with the shadow economy representing 57.4% of GDP, approximately N1.489 trillion.
Fake Drugs and Deadly Consequences
The report cites a series of recent National Agency for Food and Drug Administration and Control (NAFDAC) enforcement operations to illustrate the breadth of the problem.
In February 2026, NAFDAC uncovered what the report describes as the Trade Fair 'Death Warehouse', a seizure of "over 10 million doses of fake drugs worth N3 billion and capable of killing three million Nigerians."
Days later, from the same Lagos Trade Fair Complex, NAFDAC seized "another N3 billion haul of banned and counterfeit cosmetics."
These products contained dangerous levels of mercury, hydroquinone, and corticosteroids.
In December 2025, NAFDAC destroyed "N55.4 billion worth of products in Ibadan and N10.19 billion in Kano."
However, the report warns that these operations should not be mistaken for successes. "These are not victories," the report states. "They are symptoms of systemic failure."
The Human Toll
In the report, the pharmaceutical sector is described as the most lethal.
The report quantifies the human consequences of counterfeit pharmaceuticals. It states that "the WHO estimates that 15–17% of drugs in circulation in Nigeria are counterfeit or substandard, a figure NAFDAC has also cited, while trade stakeholders have placed the figure as high as 50%."
Globally, the report notes, "UNODC estimates that approximately 267,000 children die each year after taking counterfeit antimalarial medications, and substandard drugs kill approximately 500,000 persons in sub-Saharan Africa each year."
In Nigeria alone, the report states that "Nigeria loses over 60,000 lives annually to antimicrobial resistance (AMR), a crisis substantially driven by substandard antibiotics."
The report makes a critical observation about how these deaths are recorded: "Treatment failure from fake drugs is routinely attributed to 'complications' rather than product fraud, making the true death toll invisible."
The report quotes Dr. Martins Iluyomade, NAFDAC's Director of Investigation and Enforcement, as saying: "What we discovered should make every Nigerian cry. When fake injections are used in emergency cases like cerebral malaria, it becomes a death sentence."
Auto Parts and Electronics
The report warns that 95% of imported auto spare parts fail minimum standards, costing Nigeria over $2 billion annually. Fake electrical cables and counterfeit circuit breakers are also widespread, with the DAWN Commission noting: “Substandard electrical cables that cannot carry rated loads are a primary cause of electrical fires in Nigerian homes and businesses.”
Alaba International Market and the Lagos Trade Fair Complex were identified as notorious hubs for counterfeit electronics and spare parts, with enforcement teams often facing violent resistance.
Structural Failures and Weak Penalties
The DAWN Commission criticises Nigeria’s current anti-counterfeiting strategy as reactive and enforcement-driven, relying on cyclical raids and destruction exercises that fail to prevent re-stocking.
NAFDAC’s limited reach is highlighted: “NAFDAC has six zonal offices for 36 states and the FCT. The South-West zone alone covers Oyo, Lagos, Ogun, Osun, Ekiti, and Ondo, a region with a combined population exceeding 40 million and the highest concentration of counterfeit operations on the continent.”
'A Minor Business Expense, Not a Deterrent'
The report is scathing about Nigeria's penalty structure for convicted counterfeiters. The maximum fine under the Counterfeit and Fake Drugs Act Cap C.34 LFN 2004 is N500,000, less than $350.
"For operations worth billions of naira," the report states, "this is not a deterrent; it is a licence fee."
The report quotes Christy Obiazikwor, NAFDAC's Deputy Director of Public Affairs, who said: "The laws do not deter offenders. They can simply pay a small fine and go free, undermining our efforts to fight counterfeiting."
The report presents a comparative table showing that while Nigeria's penalty for counterfeiting causing death is a maximum of 15 years imprisonment and a N500,000 fine, China imposes the death penalty for deaths caused, fines of 15–30 times illegal gains, life imprisonment, and mandatory asset forfeiture. The report notes that China has achieved "significant deterrence" as a result.
The report's arithmetic is stark: "if a counterfeiting operation generating N3 billion carries a maximum penalty of N500,000, and if judicial delays mean effective prosecution takes a decade, the rational economic calculation firmly favours continued operations."
The Notorious Markets of Lagos
The report traces the documentation of Nigeria's counterfeit markets to a 2014 submission by the US Trademark Working Group to the Office of the US Trade Representative, which identified "thirteen notorious markets across Nigeria."
The report states that "Alaba International Market (Ojo, Lagos) was identified as notorious for counterfeit electrical and electronic goods and pirated music and film works, described as a major supply hub for the entire West African market, with traders characterised as 'hostile, defiant and violent' toward enforcement teams."
Regarding the Trade Fair Market on the Badagry Expressway, the report notes it was identified as having "dedicated sections for counterfeit spare parts and cosmetics," with the submission warning that its internal security unit "can be very dangerous" if not engaged cooperatively before any enforcement action.
The report estimates that "40% of shops across these markets trade in counterfeit or pirated goods, with the majority of illegal stock concealed in secret warehouses located outside the market perimeter."
The report identifies "China as the major source of counterfeit and pirated products entering Nigeria, with many consignments routed through Dubai and entering through porous land borders including the Seme border with Cotonou and northern borders with Niger, Chad, and Cameroon."
The report also documents "a systemic intelligence compromise" identified in the 2014 filing: "enforcement officers routinely tipped off market operators about upcoming raids in exchange for bribes, causing offending goods to disappear before action could be taken, a problem that persists in NAFDAC's enforcement operations to this day."
The Cost of Inaction
The report concludes with a detailed economic analysis of the cost of inaction.
According to the report, "SON estimates Nigeria loses approximately N15 trillion ($19.2 billion) annually to substandard goods across all product categories." It adds that "the counterfeit economy operates largely tax-free, generating estimated annual losses of N85–120 billion in uncollected VAT, customs duties, and corporate taxes."
The report states that "Nigeria's pharmaceutical industry, currently valued at approximately N2.8 trillion ($1.8 billion), could expand to N8–10 trillion if the counterfeit crisis is resolved and local manufacturing capacity is fully utilised."
The report notes that "recent challenges have driven multinational pharmaceutical companies GSK and Sanofi to cease direct manufacturing operations in Nigeria in 2023, with counterfeiting and intellectual property risks among the contributing factors to an increasingly unattractive investment environment."
Under the African Continental Free Trade Area (AfCFTA), the report warns that "Nigerian pharmaceutical and food manufacturers risk losing intra-African market opportunities because of the reputational damage from substandard and falsified products."
However, the report also identifies a significant opportunity: "Out of 172 pharmaceutical manufacturers in ECOWAS, 120 are in Nigeria, a manufacturing base that, if freed from unfair counterfeit competition, could supply the continent."
The DAWN Commission calls for urgent reforms, including: A constitutional amendment to move consumer product regulation from the Exclusive Legislative List to the Concurrent List, enabling state-level enforcement.
It also called for stronger penalties, including life imprisonment and the death penalty for deaths caused by counterfeit products.
The report said, "The economic cost of inaction exceeds the combined value of what NAFDAC has destroyed in all its major exercises to date. The N55.4 billion destroyed in Ibadan and N10.19 billion in Kano in December 2025 alone barely scratch the surface of N15 trillion in annual losses."
It adds: "The question is not whether Nigeria can afford to act. The question is how much longer Nigeria can afford inaction."
"Every day of delay represents thousands of Nigerians consuming fake antimalarials, toxic cosmetics, substandard brake pads, and counterfeit electrical cables," the report states. "The invisible body count rises while enforcement chases shadows."
The report calls on Southwest Nigeria to champion the shift from reaction to prevention.
"Southwest Nigeria has more to gain and more to lose than any other region," the report states. "It hosts the highest concentration of counterfeit operations, suffers the most harm, and has the most to gain from reform."
The report adds: "Its governors, legislators, business leaders, and citizens must be the champions of this shift from reaction to prevention."
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