A Lagos father demands justice after his nine-month-old twin sons died hours after routine immunisation at a government clinic.
Samuel Alozie, a devastated father known online as Promise Samuel, accuses staff at Ajangbadi Primary Health Centre in Ojo Local Government Area of administering fake, expired, or overdosed injections and unauthorised deworming tablets that killed his nine-month-old identical twin sons, Testimony and Timothy.
Alozie took the healthy boys for their scheduled immunisation on the morning of December 24, 2025.
Immediately after the shots, the infants grew extremely weak, developed high fevers, and stopped eating or playing as usual.
The nurse instructed the parents to give paracetamol and bathe them to reduce the temperature.
Despite following these steps, both children died the next morning—Christmas Day, December 25, 2025.
In viral videos shared on TikTok, Alozie displays the twins’ remains in body bags and recounts the rapid deterioration.
He insists the boys had thrived since birth with no serious illnesses and regularly tolerated minor issues with simple paracetamol.
The grieving father highlights several red flags.
A different nurse—not the usual one—handled the session and gave deworming medicine without his consent or any mention of worms.
Alozie rejects the centre’s alleged suggestion that food bacteria caused the deaths, questioning how food the children ate safely for months could suddenly prove fatal.
“The government killed my children with fake injection and fake vaccine,” Alozie declares in his emotional appeal.
He warns parents to verify every drug during immunisation visits and fears authorities might manipulate the autopsy results to shield the state-run facility.
Multiple outlets, including Punch, Daily Post, TVC News, and Politics Nigeria, report the story and note that the Lagos State Ministry of Health and Primary Health Care Board have issued no official statement on the incident or autopsy findings as of January 16, 2026.
The Elegant Nurses Forum calls for an urgent independent probe and the removal of unqualified staff, describing the tragedy as heartbreaking and unacceptable.
Alozie pleads for help from human rights lawyers and the public. “Please, if you’re a lawyer or human rights lawyer, help me,” he says.
“I buried my children, but their spirits are not at peace.”
The case reignites concerns over drug quality, consent, and accountability in Nigeria’s primary healthcare system, especially for vulnerable infants.
