Monday, June 8, 2026 - The Pharmacy Council of Nigeria has sealed no fewer than 572 pharmacies, patent medicine stores and illegal medicine outlets across Plateau State following a four-day enforcement operation
Announcing the exercise at a press conference in Jos on Friday, the PCN’s
Head of Enforcement, Dr Suleiman Chiroma, said the outlets were shut for
multiple regulatory breaches, including cooking inside drug premises, unauthorized
clinical practice, and improper access to controlled medicines.
Speaking on behalf of the Council’s Registrar, Ibrahim Ahmed, Chiroma
stated that the operation was carried out under the Pharmacy Council of Nigeria
(Establishment) Act No. 31 of 2022. He described it as part of a broader effort
to enforce the National Drug Distribution Guidelines aimed at fixing what the
Federal Government has called the country’s “chaotic drug distribution system.”
“The major goal of the NDDG is to ensure drug distribution through approved
channels, from the point of manufacture or importation to the end user,”
Chiroma said.
He added: “The ongoing enforcement initiative is systematically
disengaging non-professional actors from the pharmaceutical supply chain and
remedying deficiencies in storage infrastructure. This intervention is
fundamental to the eradication of substandard and falsified medicinal
products.”
According to the PCN, enforcement teams visited eight local government
areas, including Jos South, Jos North, Mangu, Shendam, Barkin Ladi, Qua’an Pan
and Bassa. A total of 778 premises were inspected, comprising 199 pharmacies,
499 patent medicine stores and 80 illegal outlets.
Chiroma reported that 572 premises were ultimately sealed: 120 pharmacies,
372 patent medicine stores, and all 80 illegal outlets. Five compliance
directives were also issued.
“Of the 199 pharmacies visited, 60 percent were sealed. This finding
reflects a deeply concerning standard of pharmaceutical practice within the
state and underscores the need for the Pharmacy Council of Nigeria to intensify
its regulatory efforts in Plateau State,” he said
The Council noted that only 26 percent of all inspected premises were pharmacies, while the majority were patent medicine vendors or unlicensed operations. Observed violations included cooking inside medicine outlets, unauthorised clinical practice, storage and dispensing of medicines beyond legal limits, non-pharmacists accessing poison cupboards, and obstruction of pharmacy inspectors.
“Such practices pose grave risks to public health and national security, as controlled medicines may be diverted into the hands of criminal elements and insurgents,” Chiroma warned.
Despite the large number of closures, the Council said illegal premises
accounted for just 10 percent of all sites visited and 14 percent of those
sealed. “This indicates a relatively low prevalence of illegal premises in
Plateau State,” Chiroma said. However, he expressed disappointment with
registered pharmacies, noting that only 40 percent were found to be in good
standing, with many operating under incomplete registration.
Chiroma said the PCN “remains unwavering in its statutory mandate to
safeguard integrity within the pharmaceutical practice environment. All
premises engaged in the handling of medicines shall be subject to rigorous and
sustained regulatory oversight.” The Council urged residents to patronise only
licensed medicine outlets.

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