National Issues

When Law Enforcement Becomes A Threat: The EFCC’s Disturbing Raid On Uyo Teaching Hospital -By Isaac Asabor

Patients arrive there daily from Ikot Ekpene, Eket, Oron, and remote riverine communities where access to quality healthcare remains painfully limited. Mothers come seeking safe childbirth. Accident victims are rushed in from dangerous highways. Children battling severe malaria are carried in by exhausted parents who have already spent everything they have simply trying to get treatment.It was this sanctuary that armed operatives reportedly invaded.

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There are boundaries that should never be crossed, not by criminals, not by desperate men, and certainly not by institutions entrusted with protecting the public. Last week, the Economic and Financial Crimes Commission (EFCC) crossed one of those boundaries.

In what may go down as one of the most troubling operations in its history, armed EFCC operatives reportedly stormed the University of Uyo Teaching Hospital (UUTH),  not a criminal hideout, not a money-laundering hub, but a place of refuge for the sick, vulnerable, and poor across Akwa Ibom State. The question of their actions left hanging in the air is one no official statement can easily answer: what happened to our humanity?

To be clear, corruption is a serious national plague. It has stolen public wealth, crippled institutions, and left communities across Nigeria battling decayed infrastructure and abandoned promises. The EFCC was created to confront that reality. But when an agency loses sight of the human beings it exists to protect, it risks becoming dangerously indistinguishable from the abuse it was established to fight. That is the uncomfortable line the EFCC appeared to approach in Uyo.

Uyo is a city known for its warmth, resilience, and quiet dignity. For many residents of Akwa Ibom and neighbouring communities, the University of Uyo Teaching Hospital is more than a medical institution, it is often the last hope for survival.

Patients arrive there daily from Ikot Ekpene, Eket, Oron, and remote riverine communities where access to quality healthcare remains painfully limited. Mothers come seeking safe childbirth. Accident victims are rushed in from dangerous highways. Children battling severe malaria are carried in by exhausted parents who have already spent everything they have simply trying to get treatment.It was this sanctuary that armed operatives reportedly invaded.

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Eyewitness accounts described scenes of confusion and panic: officers shouting orders through crowded wards, frightened patients clutching drips and oxygen lines, medical staff interrupted mid-treatment, and families thrown into distress as heavily armed men moved through sensitive hospital spaces. These were not statistics. They were human beings already fighting for their health and survival.

No reasonable person disputes the importance of holding financial criminals accountable. Reports suggest the EFCC was pursuing a suspect accused of financial crimes who allegedly sought hospital admission while evading arrest. If that is true, then the agency had every right to investigate and apprehend the individual within the bounds of the law.

But even legitimate law enforcement has limits. This is as the pursuit of one suspect cannot justify actions that place hundreds of vulnerable patients at risk. A hospital is not an ordinary operational environment. It is a place where fear, disruption, and panic can carry life-threatening consequences.

When armed operations interfere with emergency care, intimidate medical personnel, or create chaos around critically ill patients, the consequences may not always be immediately visible, but they can be devastating all the same.

One can only imagine the anxiety of an elderly hypertensive patient hearing armed officers shouting outside a ward, or the distress of a mother trying to shield a feverish child in the middle of confusion. These moments matter. In healthcare settings, even brief disruptions can carry dangerous implications. That is why restraint, planning, and discretion are not optional in such operations, they are essential.

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What makes the incident even more troubling is that there were alternatives. The agency could have coordinated quietly with hospital management. It could have maintained surveillance outside the facility, monitored exits, or waited until the suspect was medically cleared. It could have executed its duties with professionalism and sensitivity, avoiding unnecessary panic among vulnerable patients and healthcare workers. Instead, the operation reportedly reflected excessive force and poor judgment. And in doing so, it sent a deeply disturbing message to ordinary Nigerians: that even hospitals are no longer safe from aggressive displays of state power.

That perception is dangerous for public trust. Law enforcement agencies derive legitimacy not merely from the authority they possess, but from the restraint and responsibility with which they exercise it. Once citizens begin to fear those meant to protect them, institutions lose moral credibility.

There will be those who defend the operation by insisting that criminals should find no refuge anywhere, including hospitals. But that argument misses the larger point entirely. A society does not strengthen justice by traumatizing the sick and vulnerable. It weakens it.

The EFCC owes the patients, staff, and families affected by this operation a sincere and unambiguous apology, not a carefully worded bureaucratic statement, but a genuine acknowledgement that the handling of the raid caused fear, distress, and public outrage.

The people inside UUTH were not collateral damage. They were citizens deserving of dignity, protection, and compassion.

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Nigeria’s fight against corruption is necessary. But that fight must never come at the expense of humanity itself.

Because when patients lying in hospital beds begin to fear law enforcement more than illness, something has gone terribly wrong.

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