FG to Introduce Mandatory Drug Test For Varsity Students as Substance Abuse Alarms Surge
RYNI News | Blessing Isiuwa
31 July 2025
In an unprecedented policy shift aimed at tackling Nigeria’s deepening substance abuse crisis among youth, the Federal Government has announced mandatory drug integrity testing for students in tertiary institutions nationwide.
Minister of Education, Dr. Tunji Alausa, made this declaration on Wednesday following a strategic meeting in Abuja with the Chairman of the National Drug Law Enforcement Agency (NDLEA), Brigadier General Buba Marwa (retd). The move, he said, is both urgent and non-negotiable.
“We do not have a choice,” Alausa asserted. “We’re starting with drug tests for all new and returning students in our tertiary institutions—and we will follow through with random testing as well.”
The measure is part of a wider three-pronged strategy proposed by the NDLEA to combat the alarming rise in youth drug use: a complete overhaul of drug education in school curricula, the introduction of dedicated anti-drug programmes in secondary schools, and the rollout of nationwide drug testing policies for campuses.
Marwa, a relentless voice in Nigeria’s war on narcotics, warned that substance abuse has become a national emergency, directly fueling terrorism, kidnapping, and other violent crimes. “We are fighting for the souls of our children,” he said. “Without drugs, many criminal activities simply wouldn’t happen.”
Citing the NDLEA’s arrest of over 40,000 drug offenders and seizure of more than 5,500 metric tonnes of narcotics in just two years, Marwa emphasized the gravity of the threat. “This is not just about discipline—this is about national survival,” he declared.
Dr. Alausa echoed the concern, painting a bleak picture of how drug use is derailing Nigeria’s youth. “When our students are ensnared by drugs, their education suffers,” he said. “It blunts their critical thinking, erodes their judgment, and renders them unemployable. That’s the beginning of a dangerous cycle.”
In a bold structural response, the minister announced the creation of a Substance Use Prevention Unit within the Ministry of Education. He also committed to revising the secondary school curriculum to include updated drug education content, starting immediately.
Alausa further revealed plans to partner with the Universal Basic Education Commission and TETFund to strengthen the NDLEA’s academy in Jos, Plateau State, and to cascade preventive education down to the primary level.
“This is a national duty,” he concluded. “We must protect our youth from the slow poison of drugs. Education must lead the charge.”
If implemented effectively, the initiative could mark a turning point in Nigeria’s decades-long battle against youth substance abuse, placing schools at the forefront of prevention and early intervention.
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