Skip to content
Saturday 20 June 2026
  • Home
  • Advertise with us
  • Contact
The Frontier
Click to read
The Frontier
  • News
  • Crime
  • Politics
  • Headlines
  • Education
  • Health
  • Business & Economy
  • Sports
  • More
    • International
    • Religion
    • Entertainment
    • Info Tech
    • Matilda Showbiz
      • Gists
      • Music
      • Gossips
      • Oga MAT
      • Romance
    • Arts & Culture
    • Environment
    • Opinion
    • Features
    • Epistles of Anthony Kila
    • EyeCare with Dr Priscilia Imade
The Frontier
  • News
  • Crime
  • Politics
  • Religion
  • Headlines
  • Education
  • International
  • Business & Economy
  • Entertainment
  • Sports
  • Arts & Culture
  • Environment
  • Health
  • Matilda Showbiz
    • Gists
    • Music
    • Gossips
    • Oga MAT
    • Romance
  • Opinion
  • Epistles of Anthony Kila
  • EyeCare with Dr Priscilia Imade
  • Info Tech
  • Interview
The Frontier
Click to read
Health
Health

Death served fresh: How Nigerians are unknowingly eating poison every day

The FrontierThe FrontierNovember 6, 2025 4442 Minutes read0

•Food market

From roadside fruit stalls to open-air meat markets, a silent killer lurks on Nigerian plates.

Fruits ripened overnight with calcium carbide, meat cooked tender with paracetamol, grains preserved with sniper insecticide, and cassava soaked in bleach or detergent — these shocking revelations emerged from a Senate investigation that has now shaken the nation’s conscience.

Declaring the situation a “public health emergency”, the Senate yesterday moved to amend existing laws and impose stiffer penalties on anyone using toxic chemicals in food production or processing across the country, reports The Guardian.

The resolution followed the adoption of a damning report by the Joint Senate Committees on Health (Secondary and Tertiary) and Agricultural Services, Production and Rural Development, which uncovered widespread, dangerous, and illegal practices in Nigeria’s food supply chain.

“What Nigerians are eating daily is slow poison,” one lawmaker lamented during the debate.

“This is not about consumer rights — it’s about survival.”

The Senate’s investigative hearing, held on July 17, 2025, revealed a chilling trend of chemical abuse in food processing.

Fruit sellers were found using raw calcium carbide — an industrial chemical for welding — to speed up ripening, releasing poisonous arsenic and phosphine gas in the process.

Meat vendors reportedly boiled tough beef with paracetamol tablets to soften it.

Grain merchants used Sniper (Dichlorvos) to kill insects in stored grains. Cassava processors soaked tubers in detergent or Hypo bleach.

Palm oil and pepper sellers used Sudan IV dye — a banned colouring agent linked to cancer — to enhance redness.

And in abattoirs, some butchers burnt tyres to remove animal furs, coating meat with toxic residues. Even fruits on supermarket shelves were not spared: some were coated with Morpholine, a waxing chemical banned by the European Union for its potential to cause liver and kidney damage.

The Senate report warned that these substances have been directly linked to cancer, kidney and liver diseases, and foodborne infections such as cholera and Lassa fever.

The consequences, the lawmakers said, are staggering.

In 2025 alone, Nigeria recorded over 14,000 cholera cases resulting in 378 deaths, while 119 people died from food-related Lassa fever infections.

The World Health Organisation (WHO) estimates that Nigerians suffer over one million cases of foodborne illnesses annually, costing the economy more than $3.6 billion in productivity losses and health expenses.

“These are not statistics,” one senator warned. “These are families — children and mothers — dying because we are eating chemically poisoned food.”

In response, the Senate resolved to strengthen existing laws, including Sections 243 to 245 of the Criminal Code, to prescribe tougher penalties for offenders involved in food adulteration.

The lawmakers also directed the Federal Ministry of Agriculture and Food Security, Nigeria Agricultural Quarantine Services (NAQS), Federal Competition and Consumer Protection Commission (FCCPC), and Nigeria Council of Food Science and Technology (NiCFOST) to immediately launch enforcement drives and nationwide sensitisation campaigns.

They warned that without urgent action, millions of Nigerians would remain exposed to chronic poisoning and disease from unsafe food.

“This is a national health emergency,” the Senate declared.

“We must protect what Nigerians eat — from farm to table.”

The Senate’s resolution marks one of the most decisive legislative responses yet to Nigeria’s mounting food safety crisis. But lawmakers admitted that laws alone would not suffice without strong enforcement and public awareness.

The committees urged federal and state agencies to engage communities, schools, and marketplaces in continuous education campaigns while ensuring erring vendors face the full weight of the law.

As one senator put it bluntly during plenary: “Food is life — but in Nigeria today, food has become death served fresh.”

 

 

Tags
Death served freshNigerianspoison
FacebookTwitterWhatsAppLinkedInEmailLink
Previous post Order withdrawal of security personnel from PDP secretariat, go after terrorists – Party chieftain Bode George tells Tinubu, Ribadu
next post Court dismisses Dangote’s ₦100 billion suit against NNPCL, others over oil import licence
Related posts
  • Related posts
  • More from author
Health

EBOLA ALERT: Lagos tightens border surveillance as outbreak looms across Africa

June 15, 20260
Health

Cholera kills 5 residents in Plateau, 53 infected

June 15, 20260
Health

Ebola threat: Varsity professor urges FG, Nigerians to embrace prevention over cure

June 10, 20260
Load more
Read also
Inside Akwa Ibom Today

inside the Hill top newspaper

February 9, 20250
Politics

Ekiti governorship election: Elderly voters stranded by BVAS authentication failures

June 20, 20260
Politics

JUST IN: Voting commences in Rivers senatorial by-election

June 20, 20260
Politics

HAPPENING NOW: INEC officials idle, low turnout recorded at Kebbi by-election

June 20, 20260
Crime

Gunshots as Abia youths show the way, attack terrorists, rescue kidnap victims

June 20, 20260
Interview

My brother struggled to gain admission, died 24 hours after convocation – Sibling

June 20, 20260
News

Again, Tinubu extends tenure of Customs Comptroller General

June 20, 20260
Load more

inside the Hill top newspaper

February 9, 2025

Ekiti governorship election: Elderly voters stranded by BVAS authentication failures

June 20, 2026

JUST IN: Voting commences in Rivers senatorial by-election

June 20, 2026

HAPPENING NOW: INEC officials idle, low turnout recorded at Kebbi by-election

June 20, 2026

Gunshots as Abia youths show the way, attack terrorists, rescue kidnap victims

June 20, 2026

My brother struggled to gain admission, died 24 hours after convocation – Sibling

June 20, 2026

inside the Hill top newspaper

0 Comments

Ekiti governorship election: Elderly voters stranded by BVAS authentication failures

0 Comments

5 burnt to death scooping fuel from fallen tanker

0 Comments

Naira slumps further as dollar scarcity bites harder

0 Comments

BREAKING: Appeal Court sacks Senate Minority Leader, orders election rerun

0 Comments

Again, Trump fined $10,000 for violating gag order

0 Comments

Follow us

FacebookLike our page
InstagramFollow us
YoutubeSubscribe to our channel
WhatsappContact us
Latest news
1

inside the Hill top newspaper

February 9, 2025
2

Contaminated water in Lagos inflicts deadly illnesses on children

May 19, 2026
3

Fraudulent visa: Nigerian family faces deportation from Canada over fake admission letter

August 2, 2024
4

JUST IN: New US Consul General arrives Lagos

July 18, 2025
5

Kenyan President Ruto convenes cabinet meeting over deadly floods

April 30, 2024
6

Trump voids Biden’s pardons of Capitol attack investigators

March 17, 2025
Popular
1

inside the Hill top newspaper

February 9, 2025
2

Atletico ready to rival Barcelona for Rashford

December 19, 2024
3

Commission pledges strict data privacy in Police recruitment

February 5, 2026
4

Fresh crisis rocks Zamfara APC as another faction emerges

July 12, 2024
5

Leadership crisis rocks Trade Union Congress

May 7, 2026
6

African Apostolic Church President is dead

April 21, 2026

About The Frontier

The Frontier is Nigeria’s leading online newspaper. It is published by Okims Media Links Limited headed by Sunny Okim, a veteran journalist who is widely known as The Grandmaster, fondly called so by colleagues and friends for being Nigeria’s pioneer movie journalist.

Most viewed

inside the Hill top newspaper

February 9, 2025

Top 5 smallest countries in the world

September 24, 2024

Ex-Super Eagle, Temile unveils Football Foundation

October 27, 2023

Cyclone Chido death toll rises to 94 in Mozambique

December 23, 2024

JUST IN: Court sacks first class monarch in Kogi

February 3, 2025
Top posts

Categories

  • News4670
  • Politics4298
  • Crime4061
  • International2829
  • Sports2351
  • Business & Economy2173
  • Headlines2113
  • Education1294
  • Matilda Showbiz921
  • Health825
  • Entertainment760
  • Africa515
  • Religion467
  • Environment329
  • Special266
  • Info Tech229
  • Arts & Culture227
  • Hunger protests in Nigeria224
  • Inside Akwa Ibom Today180
  • Interview179
  • Opinion150
  • EyeCare with Dr Priscilia Imade121
  • Advert30
  • Epistles of Anthony Kila19
  • Trends17
  • Local News5
  • World Cup 20264

© 2026 The Frontier, Published by Okims Media Links Limited.

designed by winnet services

  • Home
  • Advertise with us
  • Contact