NIGERIA is still absorbing the shock surrounding the reported death of a young and popular singer following a snake bite in Abuja. Beyond the grief and online reactions, the incident has forced an uncomfortable national conversation.
It happened in the country’s capital, a city meant to reflect Nigeria’s highest standards of infrastructure and emergency preparedness. Yet, when a life-threatening emergency struck, serious questions emerged about readiness, response, and access to urgent medical care.
This was not a remote village or an underserved rural settlement. It occurred in Abuja, home to the seat of power, international institutions, and some of the nation’s most prominent hospitals. If a medical emergency of this magnitude could overwhelm systems in the capital, the implications for other parts of the country are deeply troubling.
Snake bites are not uncommon in Nigeria. Every year, cases are recorded across multiple states, particularly in farming communities and regions where human settlements continue to encroach on wildlife habitats. Victims are often farmers, children, and rural dwellers whose stories rarely make the news. Some survive after long delays. Many do not. Most of these cases pass without public attention or official review.
What made this case different was visibility. The victim was a public figure, a rising talent whose work had already placed her in the national spotlight. Her death drew attention to a reality that thousands of Nigerians quietly confront every year. It revealed how emergencies that are considered routine elsewhere can quickly become fatal when systems fail.
Reports surrounding the incident have raised difficult but necessary questions. How quickly can emergency cases be handled in Abuja hospitals? Are essential life-saving supplies consistently available, or only assumed to be? How effective are referral systems when minutes can determine survival? These are questions Nigerians should not be asking after a tragedy, especially one that occurred in the nation’s capital.
Abuja is expected to set the standard for the rest of the country. It should represent what is possible when planning, funding, and coordination work as they should. When that expectation is not met, it exposes a nationwide vulnerability. Emergency healthcare is not about modern buildings or reputation. It is about preparedness, trained personnel, and systems that function under pressure without delay or confusion.
If gaps can exist in Abuja, the situation in many states becomes even more alarming. In several state capitals and rural communities, hospitals struggle daily with limited resources, understaffing, unreliable supply chains, and delayed emergency response. In such environments, survival often depends on chance rather than systems.
This incident has pulled back the curtain on a long-standing problem. It is not about one tragic loss. It is about a healthcare system that reacts after disasters instead of preparing before they happen. It is about a country where emergency readiness is often treated as optional rather than essential.
The risk now is that public attention will fade as the news cycle moves on. That would be a missed opportunity. This moment should serve as an eye opener and a call to action. Authorities must conduct serious assessments of emergency preparedness, starting from the capital and extending to every state. Hospitals must be properly equipped. Supply chains must be strengthened. Clear accountability must be established.
Public concern should also go beyond high-profile cases. Every Nigerian life lost to preventable failures deserves scrutiny, questions, and answers. Because if emergencies can expose cracks in Abuja, then the states are standing on even weaker ground.
If nothing changes, this will not be an isolated tragedy. It will be a warning that Nigeria chose to ignore.
- West is a seasoned journalist and development practitioner with over a decade of experience in media, human rights advocacy, and NGO leadership. Her syndicated column, The Wednesday Lens, is published every Wednesday in News Point Nigeria newspaper. She can be reached at bomawest111@gmail.com.

