KEY POINTS
- Nigeria Customs opens 60-bed hospital in Bauchi.
- ASR Africa funded the project with N500 million.
- Nigeria Customs expands health infrastructure for officers and communities.
Nigeria’s Customs Service has opened a 60-bed hospital in Bauchi State, expanding medical capacity for its personnel through a N500 million grant from Abdul Samad Rabiu’s ASR Africa foundation.
Comptroller-General Bashir Adeniyi commissioned the facility on Tuesday, describing it as a strategic investment in the health and operational readiness of officers who serve in remote and high-pressure postings.
“Our officers serve with dedication under challenging conditions,” Adeniyi said at the ceremony. “Providing access to quality medical care is critical to maintaining their health, morale and operational readiness.”
The hospital was initially conceived as a 30-bed project before a needs assessment prompted the service to double its capacity and upgrade its infrastructure.
Nigeria Customs Expands Health Infrastructure
The expanded facility now includes modern equipment and enhanced operational capacity, according to the Customs chief. Beyond serving officers and their families, the hospital will admit residents from nearby communities in Bauchi.
Adeniyi said the project reflects broader efforts to strengthen institutional welfare systems within the service, adding that improved healthcare access directly supports performance and retention.
He credited ASR Africa and its parent group, BUA, for backing what he called a long-term investment in both public welfare and institutional resilience.
ASR Africa Backs Nigeria Customs Hospital
ASR Africa Managing Director Ubong Udo said the hospital forms part of the foundation’s Security Sector Support Programme, which channels funding to agencies responsible for public safety.
“Our interventions cut across health, education and social development,” Udo said, noting that the organization is currently executing about 82 projects across Nigeria and other African countries.
He said the foundation allows beneficiary institutions to determine priority projects rather than imposing initiatives. In this case, Nigeria Customs chose to deploy the grant toward healthcare infrastructure.
“It is impossible to achieve meaningful development without an environment that is safe and secure,” Udo said, adding that partnerships with security agencies remain central to ASR Africa’s strategy.
According to Billionaires Africa, the Bauchi hospital underscores how private capital continues to supplement public spending in Nigeria’s health sector, particularly for uniformed services operating outside major urban centers.


