HEALTH
Why Nigeria Must Declare a State of Emergency on Malaria – Hon. Amobi Ogah Reveals at National Retreat
Why Nigeria Must Declare a State of Emergency on Malaria – Hon. Amobi Ogah Reveals at National Retreat
Hon. Amobi Ogah has warned that Nigeria is off track in malaria elimination efforts, calling for urgent domestic funding, collaboration, and a state of emergency on malaria.
…. House Committee Chair laments donor dependence, fake drugs, and stalled malaria targets; urges urgent domestic funding and collaboration to meet 2030 elimination goal
By All Facts Newspaper – Ikot Ekpene | 1st August 2025
Rt. Hon. Amobi Godwin Ogah, FCE, Chairman of the House Committee on HIV/AIDS, Tuberculosis, Leprosy and Malaria Control, has called for urgent national action and renewed political commitment to combat malaria, warning that Nigeria’s current approach risks falling short of the 2030 malaria elimination target.
Speaking during his welcome address at the NASS/NMEP National Malaria Retreat, held at Four Points by Sheraton Hotel, Ikot Ekpene, Akwa Ibom State, from July 31 to August 1, 2025, Hon. Ogah emphasized that malaria remains Nigeria’s deadliest public Health challenge and continues to cripple economic productivity.
Nigeria Accounts for 31% of Global Malaria Deaths
Citing the 2023 World Malaria Report, Ogah revealed alarming statistics:
- 249 million malaria cases and 608,000 deaths globally in 2022
- Nigeria accounted for 27% of global cases and 31% of all deaths
- Malaria remains the leading cause of hospital attendance in the country
- Responsible for 25-30% of under-five mortality and 10% of maternal deaths
Despite over $10 billion spent on interventions since 2000, Nigeria has stalled on the World Health Organization’s Global Technical Strategy (GTS) 2016-2030.
“I have severally called for a state of emergency on malaria because the disease is endemic, devastating, and crippling our economy. Without decisive action, the 2030 elimination goal will remain a dream,” Ogah warned.
Ogah did not shy away from criticizing the National Malaria Program and stakeholders, accusing them of failing Nigerians by allowing:
- Over-reliance on foreign donors and grants
- Zero budgetary allocation for TB and Malaria in 2024
- Proliferation of fake and substandard antimalarial drugs
- Failure to collaborate on vital baseline studies
He disclosed that the committee had queried the TB and malaria program managers and confronted the coordinating minister for Health, insisting that “nobody can love Nigeria more than Nigerians” and that the status quo of donor dependency is unacceptable.
“We must reduce our over-reliance on foreign grants and mobilize domestic resources. Nigeria must fund its own public Health priorities if we are serious about saving lives,” Ogah stated.
Call for Collaboration and Legislative Backing
Hon. Ogah reaffirmed the House Committee’s commitment to providing legislative mechanisms and interventions to support malaria elimination efforts.
He appealed to National Malaria Elimination Program (NMEP), Roll Back Malaria Partnership, Malaria Consortium, and other key stakeholders to present their plans and programs to Parliament for mutual collaboration.
“We are eager to change the narrative and make Nigerians reap the benefits of universal Health care. With better synergy and political commitment, we can reignite malaria elimination efforts and meet the 2030 goal,” he said.
Declaring the National Malaria Retreat open, Ogah expressed optimism that the new leadership at NMEP will foster robust engagement with Parliament to galvanize a unified national response.
The retreat, which brought together lawmakers, Health experts, donor agencies, and implementing partners, is expected to chart actionable strategies to address:
- Funding gaps in malaria response
- Counterfeit drugs and regulatory failures
- Weak surveillance and community Health engagement
- Accelerated domestic resource mobilization
As Nigeria faces a public Health crisis, Ogah’s message is clear: political will, domestic investment, and collaboration are the only paths to eliminating malaria and saving millions of lives.
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