How 90 Prisoners Died Of Hunger, Sickness In One Month’, Freed Inmates Narrates Deplorable Condition Of NCoS

Nigeria’s correctional facilities, once envisioned as centers for rehabilitation and reintegration, have instead become breeding grounds for suffering, injustice, and death.
With overcrowding, malnutrition, and medical neglect rampant, inmates emerge not as reformed individuals but as broken souls, further alienated from society.
Despite government claims of prison reform, the lived experiences of former inmates paint a grim reality of a system in disarray; where wealth and privilege determine survival, and justice remains elusive for the poor.
We Ate Rice Only When Church Groups Came
Olawale Olagunke, a 24-year-old barber from Ile-Ife, Osun State, came to Lagos in search of a better life. Instead, he found himself trapped in a nightmare after being arrested during a police raid while offloading yams from a truck.
Unable to afford a N10,000 bail, he was charged with armed robbery and remanded in Kirikiri Medium Prison.
Describing the appalling conditions, Olagunke said, “We were 89 people crammed into a single room. We slept like fish arranged in a fridge. Once you woke up to urinate, someone else would take your spot, leaving you standing till morning.”
Hunger was another daily battle they faced
“We ate beans with stones inside. We only got rice when church evangelism teams visited,” he said.
The unsanitary environment took a deadly toll.
“Over 90 people died in a single month. If you fall sick, they would tell you to call your family for money to buy drugs. If you have no one, they give you expired medicine.
“Some inmates, out of desperation, scavenged food from dustbins. We even saw human body parts in the well while fetching water.”
After four grueling years in prison, Olagunke was finally freed with the help of the ‘Office Of The Public Defence’ (OPD) through a counsel attached to his cases, Mr. Peter Taiwo. He has, however, appealed to kind-hearted Nigerians to help him reintegrate into society.
No Bed, No Freedom Without Money
Another freed inmate, Ayomide Oyebanjo, 21, claimed that he was arrested at his boss’s child-naming ceremony near LASU. Accused of cultism, he was unable to pay the N500,000 bribe police demanded for his release.
“There were over 40 of us in one prison room, with no bed except for those who had money to buy space.
Food was scarce, with inmates surviving on meagre rations.
“We got one cup of garri and beans a day. Rice was a luxury; we only see rice when church groups donate food.”
Despite claims of rehabilitation programmes, Oyebanjo revealed how prison officials pocketed funds meant for vocational trainees.
“I was learning tailoring in the workshop. But when it was time to give us money for our work, they took it for themselves.”
Oyebanjo was eventually freed in February 2025 but spent months languishing in Badagry Prison, even after the Director of Public Prosecutions (DPP) had ordered his case to be transferred to a high court.
Meanwhile, despite being renamed correctional Centres, Nigeria’s prisons continue to be places of extreme suffering and death. Overcrowding is a major problem, with facilities designed for a few thousand inmates now housing tens of thousands.
A report by the Nigerian Correctional Service (NCoS) in 2023 showed that over 70% of inmates in Nigerian prisons are awaiting trial, many of them stuck behind bars for years without a conviction.
In some cases, people are imprisoned for minor offences such as loitering, traffic violations, or even mistaken identity.
The inadequate healthcare system in these prisons has turned minor illnesses into death sentences. Inmates who contract common ailments like malaria or typhoid are left to suffer unless they have family members willing to bribe officials for medication. Those who cannot afford treatment often die slow, painful deaths.
A former prison officer, who spoke anonymously, described the medical neglect in Nigeria’s prisons: “There are inmates with tuberculosis, HIV, and other contagious diseases, yet they are kept in the same overcrowded cells as others. Many die quietly, and their bodies are just removed in the morning.”
Given these hellish conditions, it is no surprise that prison breaks have become a common occurrence in Nigeria. Desperate inmates often stage escapes, sometimes with outside help.
In recent years, multiple prison breaks have occurred across the country, with hundreds of inmates fleeing into society. Many of these incidents have been linked to negligence, poor security, and insider collaboration.
In some cases, officials are accused of deliberately allowing criminals to escape in exchange for bribes.
Security analyst, John Adewale, stated: “The reason prison breaks keep happening is because our correctional facilities are failing in their primary duty. Inmates are not rehabilitated; they are only caged under inhumane conditions. The only thing they think about is escaping, no matter the cost.”
Legal Expert Calls for Urgent Prison Reforms
Speaking on the inhumane conditions, a lawyer, Taiwo Olatunji, emphasised the need for urgent government intervention. “The state of Nigerian prisons is alarming. Many inmates die needlessly due to sickness and neglect. The government must take immediate action to prevent these tragedies.”
With thousands of awaiting-trial inmates wasting away in overcrowded cells, it is clear that Nigeria’s prison system is broken. Instead of serving as correctional centers, they have become places of suffering and, for many, premature death.
Without immediate reform, more lives will be lost in these dark dungeons of despair.

Hafsoh Isiaq is a graduate of Linguistics. An avid writer committed to creative, high-quality research and news reportage. She has considerable experience in writing and reporting across a variety of platforms including print and online.