‘Ogogoro’ sellers storm NAFDAC office over ban


Scores of sellers of liquor popularly called ogogoro under the aegis of Oyo State Liquor Sellers Association of Nigeria, stormed the office of the National Agency for Food and Drug Administration and Control (NAFDAC) in Ibadan to protest over the ban of the liquor.

The protesters said they embarked on the move to express dissatisfaction with the prohibition of production and sales of sachet alcoholic beverages in the country by the agency.

The liquor sellers, led by the association’s president and secretary, Chief Gbadegesin Adeagbo and Chief Adebayo Ajibade respectively, were seen carrying placards with various inscriptions, calling on NAFDAC to rescind its decision.

In the separate remarks, with the southwest zonal director of NAFDAC, Mrs Roseline Ajayi, Adeagbo and Ajibade harped on the need for the government to reverse its decision on the matter.

According to Adeagbo, the union has more than 50,000 members who depend on the daily sales of alcoholic drinks for survival, adding that their outright prohibition would hurt their living standards. 

He said that the news of the prohibition of the production and sales of the product had inflicted psychological, emotional, mental and economic trauma on some of his members.

On his part, Ajibade pleaded with the Federal Government and the NAFDAC Director-General, Prof. Mojisola Adeyeye to consider the plight of liquor sellers as a result of the prohibition.



“We appeal to NAFDAC to rescind its decision on 
















the matter to prevent untimely death among us and some of us from becoming street beggars because the decision will definitely take us out of



 business,” he said.


In her response, Ajayi said the ban was aimed at controlling unrestricted access to alcoholic drinks by the underage which, she said, posed health risks to them.

She noted that in 2010 at the World Health Assembly, held in Geneva, there was a concern that the rate at which alcohol was available to young people was alarming and thus leading to addiction.

She said: “At that forum, all the countries were advised to go and stimulate strategies that would reduce alcohol accessibility to young people. But in Nigeria, nothing happened till 2018 when the federal government, NAFDAC, the Association of Food, Beverage and Tobacco Employers and other relevant stakeholders held a meeting.

“At the meeting, it was resolved that a five-year grace be given before the prohibition of the sales of 200ml sachet alcohol. The five-year grace ended in February and that is the reason the NAFDAC DG announced the prohibition.”

The zonal director, however, said the National Assembly had made a declaration on the suspension of the enforcement of the prohibition.

As we speak now, the ban was a ministerial directive, and with the pronouncement from the national assembly, the minister hasn’t said anything to our Director-General. So as we are now, I do not see any reason for this protest because we are still waiting for a directive on whether we will go ahead with the prohibition or rescind it.

“I can only appeal to you to wait till we get another ministerial directive. It is not in my power to say the enforcement will continue or stop,” she said.

Ajayi, however, assured the protesters that their message would be delivered to the appropriate authorities, even as she urged them to remain calm and maintain peace.


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