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The Quiet Epidemic: How Ikotun’s Streets Reflect a National Crisis -By Patrick Iwelunmor

Addressing this crisis requires a multi-dimensional response. Laws must be enforced consistently and transparently to disrupt networks and deter misuse. Prevention through youth engagement, education, and community-based initiatives is essential to strengthen resilience and awareness. Investment in mental health services and rehabilitation provides pathways for recovery and reintegration. Community-led support networks are equally vital to restoring social norms and reinforcing family and neighbourhood cohesion.

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A domestic scuffle in Ikotun, Lagos, recently exposed a far deeper social problem. A mother struggled to retrieve a pressing iron from her son, visibly distressed, while the young man insisted he needed money to eat. At first glance, it seemed like a simple family dispute. But the story of Uche, a young man reportedly deported after living abroad and now grappling with depression and substance abuse, reveals a growing crisis: the normalization of drug addiction and its devastating impact on families, youth, and communities.

Uche wanders the neighbourhood, talking to himself, begging for money, and sometimes selling household items to sustain his dependence. His trajectory is not unique. Across Ikotun, there are others, including bank employees, students, and youths, whose lives are unraveling under the influence of drugs. For many, what begins as casual experimentation quickly becomes a destructive habit affecting mental health, finances, relationships, and long-term prospects.

This crisis extends beyond one community, as national statistics make clear. The National Bureau of Statistics and the United Nations Office on Drugs and Crime (UNODC) report that approximately 14.3 million Nigerians aged 15 to 64 used psychoactive substances in the past year, nearly three times the global average. In Lagos State, research by the National Drug Law Enforcement Agency and the Federal Ministry of Education found that 13.6 per cent of secondary school students have experimented with drugs, with 6.9 per cent currently using them. These numbers reflect real human suffering. They highlight young lives destabilized, families under strain, and communities at risk of losing cohesion and resilience.

Accessibility has intensified the problem. Drugs are no longer confined to hidden corners. They are found in informal networks, patent medicine stores, open markets, and even among peers and family members. Vulnerable youths face near-inevitable exposure, and early access dramatically increases the likelihood of dependency. Alarmingly, some distributors are adults entrusted with care and guidance. Parents, neighbours, and other community members who should act as protectors are sometimes the ones perpetuating the cycle, eroding social norms and weakening informal systems of accountability. In extreme cases, entire households are affected, blurring lines between victim and enabler. The erosion of traditional community oversight, once a stabilizing factor, has allowed drug culture to spread unchecked in many neighbourhoods.

Law enforcement efforts have made arrests, yet challenges remain. Individuals often return to previous habits, which undermines public confidence and allows drug networks to persist. In some cases, those caught are subject to minimal consequences, creating the perception that laws are inconsistent and enforcement is unreliable. This perception can be as damaging as the reality, as it weakens deterrence and encourages more widespread misuse. The consequences of this crisis extend far beyond legality. Substance abuse fuels petty crime, theft, violent confrontations, and broader public insecurity. It also imposes a severe mental health burden, contributing to psychosis, anxiety disorders, and cognitive impairment while straining a health system already under pressure. What begins as an attempt to cope with hardship often becomes a trap, eroding trust, stability, and the social fabric of families and communities.

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Addressing this crisis requires a multi-dimensional response. Laws must be enforced consistently and transparently to disrupt networks and deter misuse. Prevention through youth engagement, education, and community-based initiatives is essential to strengthen resilience and awareness. Investment in mental health services and rehabilitation provides pathways for recovery and reintegration. Community-led support networks are equally vital to restoring social norms and reinforcing family and neighbourhood cohesion. Educational programmes that teach coping strategies, awareness campaigns that destigmatize seeking help, and local initiatives that create safe spaces for vulnerable youths are all part of the solution.

The story of Uche is both tragic and instructive. It illustrates how vulnerability, exposure, and inadequate systemic support combine to create a cycle of addiction and social instability. Ikotun is a microcosm of a national challenge. Drug abuse has grown from a peripheral concern into a societal crisis. Without sustained, coordinated interventions, communities risk losing not just potential but their very sense of stability. Addressing the issue is not just a matter of law enforcement or public health; it is a moral, social, and economic imperative. Communities that fail to protect their youth from the grip of drugs risk long-term erosion of human capital, social cohesion, and community safety.

This is a collective responsibility. Families, communities, civil society, and government agencies must collaborate to enforce laws, strengthen preventive measures, and provide accessible rehabilitation. Addiction is no longer an isolated misfortune. It is a signal of societal vulnerability. The choices made today will determine whether communities survive intact or face long-term disruption. Sustained investment in youth programmes, mental health infrastructure, and rehabilitation services will create opportunities for recovery and reintegration. At the same time, public education campaigns can help shift perceptions, reducing stigma while promoting accountability.

Uche’s story is a call to action. Behind statistics are real lives, families, and futures. Addiction is not merely a personal tragedy; it is a societal warning. Addressing this crisis is not optional. It is imperative and urgent. Communities that act decisively now, integrating enforcement, prevention, and rehabilitation, have the potential to protect their youth, strengthen families, and safeguard their future. The crisis in Ikotun is a reminder that the wellbeing of communities depends on timely, coordinated, and compassionate responses.

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