In a nation where access to healthcare often depends more on one’s wallet than on one’s condition, the death of Senator Ibrahim Musa Kontagora is both shocking and painfully familiar. Having served Niger North from 2011 to 2015, he was denied critical surgery when he couldn’t pay the full bill—despite already depositing half the amount.
It is a heartbreaking reminder: even for someone with relative privilege and political stature, inadequate finances can mean the difference between life and death. Sadly, this isn’t an isolated case—it is a reality that millions of Nigerians face every day.
A system in crisis: When care is out of reach
For decades, Nigerians have been paying for healthcare almost entirely out-of-pocket. Many families sell land, cars, and other assets—or go into debt—just to keep loved ones alive. Those who can’t raise enough are often sent home untreated, or worse, left to die. The situation is so dire that even relatively treatable conditions—malaria, hypertension, complications from childbirth—can become death sentences when money is not immediately available. In some hospitals, a deposit is demanded before a patient can even be attended to in an emergency.
Even the National Health Insurance Scheme, which should be a safety net, is too shallow to catch most citizens. Coverage is limited, reimbursement rates are outdated, and private health providers often refuse to treat insured patients because payments from the scheme are delayed. Funds meant to protect the poor and vulnerable exist on paper but remain unused in practice.
Faces behind the numbers
These statistics hide stories of flesh and blood, of dreams cut short:
A woman in labour who dies because the hospital won’t begin a Caesarean section without an advance payment.
A heart patient who is discharged to “go and look for money” while her condition worsens.
A child with appendicitis whose parents spend precious hours begging neighbours for help while the infection spreads.
They are teachers, traders, artisans, farmers, students—people whose only “fault” is being born in a country where medical care is not treated as a right.
Beyond blame
Senator Kontagora’s passing should shake our collective conscience. If someone of his political standing and connections could be refused life-saving surgery because of a bill, then what hope does a market woman in Kano or a fisherman in Bayelsa have?
This tragedy should force us to confront hard truths and act decisively:
1. Activate and fund emergency and vulnerable-group health funds so no life is lost for lack of money in an emergency.
2. Expand universal health insurance with realistic, fair payments to hospitals so that they can treat patients without financial hesitation.
3. Invest heavily in healthcare infrastructure and ensure equitable distribution across urban and rural areas.
4. Legislate and enforce protocols that prohibit hospitals from turning away critically ill patients over deposits.
Senator Kontagora’s death is not just a headline—it is a warning. It tells us that until we fix the cracks in our healthcare system, those cracks will keep swallowing our people, one life at a time.
The measure of a nation’s humanity is how it treats its most vulnerable. Right now, too many Nigerians are dying with their wallets—and their dreams—empty. The time to act is not tomorrow. It is today.

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