Nassir moves to tame illegal prescription drug sales in Mombasa
Coast
By
Ronald Kipruto
| Apr 16, 2025
Mombasa Governor Abdulswamad Nassir before the Senate CPIC Committee at Bunge Towers, Nairobi. November 25th, 2024 [Elvis Ogina, Standard]
Mombasa Governor Abdulswamad Shariff Nassir is a man on mission.
He on Tuesday this week launched a bold campaign to curb the illegal sale of prescription drugs in the county.
In a proposal submitted to Health Cabinet Secretary Aden Duale, Nassir recommended that chemists operate strictly for pharmaceutical purposes, with stricter regulations and routine inspections conducted in partnership with national enforcement agencies.
‘’We’re taking the fight to the source of prescription drug abuse. No more illegal sales in our neighbourhoods. This ends now—and I’ll see it through to the very end,’’ said the governor.
READ MORE
Reduced incomes, cash-starved private sector strain economy
KCB clocks Sh53.2b in green loans as climate finance race hots up
Safaricom profit jumps 7.2pc as total earnings now hit Sh388.7b
Proposed taxes to hit smallholder farmers hard, lobby warns
Government leases four sugar factories, to pay Sh. 6 billion to farmers
Safaricom net income jumps 10.8pc to Sh69.8bn, first in East and Central Africa
Motor industry registers drop as cash strapped businesses, households stay away
Stanbic reports Sh3.3 billion first quarter net profit
Businesses petition government over new waste management levy
“Prescription drug abuse is robbing our communities of their youth, tearing apart families, and fueling a silent public health crisis.”
As part of the proposal, Nassir wants to collaborate with the Pharmacy and Poisons Board (PPB), the National Authority for the Campaign Against Alcohol and Drug Abuse (NACADA), and the National Police Service.
The plan would restrict the sale of certain drugs to pharmacies located within Level 4 hospitals and above.
“No more backdoor sales. No more neighbourhood pharmacies acting as drug dens,” he said.
In response, Duale welcomed the initiative, calling it a timely intergovernmental collaboration to address public health threats. He promised to review the proposal and consider its adoption at the national level.