From the marble terraces of Maitama to the glimmering penthouses of Lekki and the tranquil enclaves of Asokoro, Nigeria’s elite enclaves pulse with quiet elegance. The air smells of fresh flowers and imported perfumes, generators hum like distant lullabies, and gates open to homes adorned with grace and gold. But beneath this tranquil surface lies a growing darkness – an invisible malaise gnawing at the soul of privilege.
In the quiet, manicured lanes of Abuja’s high-brow Asokoro district, Ilya, a security guard remembers the night he heard the crash.
‘I thought it was a burglary,’ he recalls softly. ‘But it was madam who had fallen. She was alone in the living room, and a bottle rolled from her hand.’
The ‘maiguard’ did not speak again of that night. In the homes of the powerful, silence is often part of the job description. But whispers travel.
Just recently, the stormy whispers surrounding billionaire Senator, Ned Nwoko and his actress wife Regina Daniels cracked open the hidden world of drug use in some affluent homes. Amid accusations of domestic violence came a counter-claim – that the young wife was allegedly battling substance addiction and had rebuffed attempts at rehabilitation.
It peeled back a layer of a growing, uncomfortable truth: substance abuse is quietly seeping into Nigeria’s affluent homes – hidden behind high walls, concealed by status, and worsened by stigma.
While the truth behind their personal turmoil remains contested, it has drawn national attention to a sobering reality: drug abuse has quietly climbed the walls of Nigeria’s mansions.
For the sake of current and future generations, all sections of society now have a challenge that requires being frontally tackled by all stakeholders
It is a growing, if hushed, epidemic. For years, the image of drug addiction in Nigeria has been confined to slums and street corners – young men clutching sachets of codeine-laced syrup or tramadol pills, the faces of unemployment and despair.
But psychiatrists, rehabilitation workers, and even domestic staff in upscale neighbourhoods across Nigerian cities say a different demographic is quietly emerging: wives of the wealthy, privileged teenagers, and middle-aged professionals whose lives, on the surface, glitter with success.
According to the United Nations Office on Drugs and Crime (UNODC), Nigeria remains Africa’s largest consumer of illicit substances, with over 14.3 million people estimated to have used drugs in the past year. That figure – about 14.4 per cent of Nigeria’s adult population – is nearly triple the global average.
While most reports focus on young, unemployed males, newer data from NDLEA and mental health clinics suggest a subtle but steady rise in prescription drug abuse among women in high-income brackets. Startlingly, women account for about 20% of UNODC’s estimates of 15 million Nigerians between ages 15 and 64 who use psychoactive substances – more than double the global average.
An earlier, 2018 report by UNODC noted that although men still outnumber women in overall drug use, women were accounting for nearly half of all amphetamine and prescription stimulant users in Nigeria, with one in every four drug users in the country being a female.
Other scholarly studies indicate that while Nigerian men are seven times more likely to use cannabis, the gender gap narrows sharply when it comes to opioids such as codeine, morphine, tramadol, and tranquilizers or cough syrups laced with codeine-substances increasingly found in the private drawers of the nation’s well-to-do homes.
According to Mr Daniel Onyishi who is Commander of the NDLEA in Anambra state:
‘The major concern is that women, especially young girls, are embracing substance abuse. One out of every four drug abusers is a woman and one out of five will suffer substance abuse disorder.’ A significant proportion of these are wives or daughters in affluent homes.
Another NDLEA officer in Abuja who promised to help arrange an elaborate interview with NDLEA spokesman, Mr. Femi Babafemi, acknowledged that drug use is no longer confined to the slums. ‘Drug abuse has moved from the ghettos to the sitting rooms of the elite. We are now arresting more people with manicured nails, designer clothes, and university degrees,’ he said.
In response to the work of a committee, which submitted a report into the widespread abuse of cough syrup that contain codeine, especially by women and girls in some northern states, the Federal Ministry of Health began efforts to curb the importation and sale of such medication.
In several southern states, cocaine, methamphetamine, and ecstasy headline the illicit market, but psychologists warn that the real plague lies in everyday prescriptions – painkillers, antidepressants, sedatives, and sleeping pills.
Unlike the stereotypical street-corner transactions in the city’s underbelly, the trade in illicit substances among Abuja’s privileged class is cloaked in urban polish. Here, dispatch riders – those ubiquitous bikers weaving through traffic with insulated boxes – have become the new couriers of addiction.
In a recent statement, NDLEA spokesperson Femi Babafemi revealed that three such riders were arrested for distributing illegal substances across the capital. The suspects – Sabo Sule, 24; Samuel Nnamdi, 28; and Idris Jibrin, 28 – were intercepted during intelligence-led stop-and-search operations in Gwarimpa, Jahi, and Galadimawa.areas.
According to the agency, a total of 149.8 grams of Canadian Loud – a highly potent strain of cannabis – was recovered from the riders, who operated under the guise of regular commercial dispatch service providers.
Beyond the high walls of wealth, there is cause for increased concerns. For years, drug addiction wore a predictable face – the face of the street boy under the bridge, the commercial bus conductor, the forlorn youth of Ajegunle or Nyanya. But today, addiction speaks in polished English, drives a sleek SUV, and posts filtered photos of luxury vacations.
An addiction therapist in Abuja, who pleaded anonymity, shared this with The Nation:
‘Every month, we receive at least four new clients from elite homes. Some are women of status – wives of politicians, CEOs, or even church leaders. They come in quietly, often at night. Their biggest fear is not death or withdrawal – it’s scandal.’
Their drugs of choice? ‘Painkillers like Tramadol, codeine cough syrups, Diazepam, sleeping pills – the so-called ‘respectable’ substances,’ she explained. ‘And then there’s wine, always within arm’s reach. Many see it as harmless, until it becomes the only friend that listens.’
From the manicured courtyards of elite private schools to the dimly lit lounges and glitzy nightclubs of Abuja, a quiet epidemic wafts through the air – shisha smoke. What begins as harmless fun, a social ritual of scented clouds and laughter, often conceals a more sinister undercurrent.
Unbeknownst to many teenagers-and to the parents who trust they are simply ‘hanging out with friends’-these sessions can become the first step down a slippery slope. Increasingly, shisha is being laced with all manner of substances designed to heighten euphoria, turning a fashionable pastime into a potential gateway to addiction.
‘Hadiza’ (not her real name), 31, a fashion entrepreneur living in Abuja’s Garki area, sips herbal tea as she recounts her descent into dependency.
‘It started after my second baby,’ she says softly. ‘I couldn’t sleep. A friend gave me a pill – said it would help me relax. It did. But then I needed more. Soon, I couldn’t go a day without it. I would smile at clients in the day, and at night, I would crumble inside.’
She pauses, eyes misting:
‘Pople think comfort protects you. But sometimes, comfort becomes the cage – the one you decorate beautifully before you realise you are trapped.’
The psychology of privilege
Psychologists argue that the trappings of wealth often conceal deep emotional voids. Dr. Bidemi Olayinka, a clinical psychologist in Abuja explains:
‘Addiction in affluent homes is not about curiosity – it’s about coping. Many of these women are emotionally isolated. They cannot scream, cannot break down, cannot confide. Their lives are performances – and drugs become the backstage curtain where they can finally be human.’
Children, too, are not spared. Left to nannies and screens, they grow up amid abundance but starved of affection. When rebellion comes, it often arrives in coded form – vaping, codeine cocktails, or nights blurred by ecstasy.
‘A child who cannot find warmth in the home,’ Dr. Olayinka adds, ‘will find it in the haze of intoxication.’
From pharmacies to night parties: what they use and how they use it all yield some interesting insights. Across the glossy surfaces of Abuja’s lounges and other cities’ private clubs, substance abuse wears a new face. It is stylish, subtle, and often hidden in designer handbags.
Even in the outskirts of Abuja, in places like Lugbe where a strip club and other joints attract night crawlers who drive in from the city in sleek cars, drug abuse is part of the treacherous fun.
On Sunday nights in Abuja’s Central Area, where the city’s trendy youth gather to perform daredevil car stunts and flaunt sleek engines beneath the glare of headlights, a quieter spectacle unfolds in the shadows – the discreet indulgence in drugs.
Among many young people from affluent homes, substance use has taken on the appearance of sophistication. Codeine and Tramadol are stealthily stirred into fruit juice or tea; sleeping pills like Valium, Lexotan, and Rivotril are taken under the guise of ‘stress relief.’ At private parties, cocaine and methamphetamine are used not for rebellion but for ‘energy.’
Even cannabis has found new disguises – baked into brownies, infused into chocolates, served up as part of an initiation into a habit-forming culture. And beneath it all lies alcohol – the socially accepted companion that often conceals more dangerous dependencies simmering beneath the surface.
The glittering influence of social media appears to be part of the problem.
In today’s digital world, social validation fuels consumption. Scrolling through Instagram, one encounters the curated illusion of the ‘soft life’ – champagne breakfasts, smoke-filled selfies, cool clubbing and parties that stretch into dawn. Media analyst Adele hukwuma observes: ‘Addiction today is aesthetic. It’s packaged as fun, freedom, sophistication. Young people don’t see substance abuse; they see lifestyle branding. And when influencers sip or puff, millions watch and learn.’
The UNODC’s 2023 survey found that peer pressure and online influence were among the top five reasons for substance initiation among Nigerian youths.
Inside many elegant homes, addiction is an unspoken war. Some of the women who once hosted parties now hide in their bedrooms, clutching a bottle of red wine like a lifeline. Some husbands who once prided themselves on family values now whisper to private doctors, desperate to reverse a saddening situation and also, avoid scandal.
A nurse at a private Abuja wellness centre revealed: ‘We have wives of very powerful men checking in for what they call ‘stress treatment’. That’s just detoxification by another name. They prefer to come in at night and leave before dawn.’
But silence has its costs. Many suffer panic attacks, breakdowns, and marital collapse. Some young men, girls and women overdose quietly, their deaths explained away as ‘cardiac arrest.’
For the entire society, the cost of denial is huge. Addiction erodes not only individuals but the moral fibre of society’s upper crust. As Dr. Tunji Yusuf, a governance scholar, warns:
‘When those in leadership – political, economic, or moral – are secretly battling addiction, society pays the hidden price. It weakens judgment, integrity, and compassion.’
The tragedy is not merely the fall of individuals, but the slow corrosion of collective values – the normalization of emotional emptiness behind designer smiles.
Through it all, healing and hope remain great possibilities. There are flickers of hope amid the gloom. The NDLEA’s War Against Drug Abuse (WADA) initiative continues to push boundaries, taking anti-drug messages to schools, religious institutions, and workplaces. But experts insist that rehabilitation models must adapt to the reality of elite addiction – confidential, discreet, and emotionally grounded.
In both formal discussions and informal circles, psychologists and medical experts continue to advocate a multi-pronged approach to addressing the growing wave of substance abuse among Nigeria’s elite. They emphasize the need for the establishment of more high-security, private recovery centres where clients’ identities are protected; emotional literacy programmes tailored for women within affluent social networks; and the promotion of faith-based and peer support groups that encourage empathy and openness rather than stigma. Equally vital, they insist, is the integration of mental health education into private schools and universities, where prevention must begin long before crisis sets in.
Churches and mosques also have pragmatic roles to play towards facilitating greeater empathy, encouraging openness and supporting rehabilitation while playing down the stigma that makes a recovering addict’s journey difficult.
As night descends on the city, the mansions of Abuja glow softly under the lamplight – serene, composed, and deceivingly perfect. Yet behind some of those ornate walls, tears mingle with perfume, and despair hides beneath silk sheets.
Drug abuse in affluent homes is not about moral failure. It is about human frailty wrapped in luxury. It is the cry for help of those who have everything, yet feel nothing.
Perhaps, in the end, the lesson is that comfort does not cure loneliness, and money cannot muffle the ache of the heart. Beneath the shimmer of wealth, the soul still hungers – for connection, for peace, for meaning.
Until we learn to treat addiction as a symptom of this deeper hunger rather than a scandal to suppress, Nigeria’s gilded cages will continue to echo with the same silent cries – muffled by privilege, sustained by shame.
Addiction, experts often say, wears many masks, and understanding its truths is the first step toward healing. For one, alcohol remains the most abused substance-its social acceptance masking the quiet devastation it leaves in its wake. Addiction itself alters the brain’s architecture, reshaping neural pathways and turning occasional indulgence into a compulsive need.
Psychologists stress that early intervention is far more effective than waiting for that fabled ‘rock-bottom’ moment. The longer dependence lingers, the harder recovery becomes. In managing addiction, empathy and communication often achieve what punishment and moral outrage cannot. A calm conversation, a listening ear, and the patient work of therapy reach far deeper than judgment ever could.
Yet, recovery is rarely swift. Many people require long-term or repeated treatment, cycling through hope, relapse, and restoration before finding balance again. Treatment works best when paired with counselling, addressing not just the body’s craving but the mind’s unhealed wounds. And when relapse happens-as it often does-it should not be seen as failure but as feedback, a signpost pointing toward what still needs mending.
Addiction, after all, is less a moral flaw than a human struggle; one that calls for compassion, understanding, and the courage to begin again.