You don’t hear the gunshots. You don’t see the blood. But in the heart of a quiet farming village just outside Makurdi, people are dying slowly—and nobody seems to care.
Mama Nkechi thought she was doing the right thing. Bought the “high-yield” maize seeds from a glossy-eyed trader who spoke more English than sense. He said it was “modern agriculture.” Said she’d harvest triple what her father did. He didn’t mention what came next.
A year later, the maize came strong, but the weeds came stronger. So she sprayed. And sprayed. The herbicide’s name? Glyphosate. She didn’t know what it meant. She only knew it killed weeds fast—and left a strange bitter smell in the air.
Now her youngest son coughs blood every morning. Her neighbour lost his sight. Her own skin itches in the rain. The local clinic says it’s “nothing.” But the symptoms are everywhere. And the questions grow louder than the crops.
What’s going on?
Genetically Modified Organisms (GMOs) were designed to help. Crops engineered in labs to resist pests and grow faster. But in Nigeria, where regulations are paper-thin, GMO seeds often come with chemical baggage—toxic herbicides, especially glyphosate.
In the West, they test these things. Label them. Fight lawsuits.
Here? They dump them. Sell them unlabeled. And the poor farmer doesn’t stand a chance.
Is GMO food itself dangerous? Maybe not.
But what about the chemicals that come with it?
Glyphosate is classified as “probably carcinogenic” by the World Health Organization.
In Nigeria, it’s sold like table salt in village markets.
Most farmers don’t know the dangers. And neither do the consumers eating their food.
And cancer? It doesn’t shout. It whispers. Until one day, it knocks on your door.
This isn’t just a rural problem.
That corn in your pap, that soy in your baby’s formula, that imported snack in your fridge—
May carry residues no one tested. No one warned you about.
It’s time to ask hard questions:
Why are GM foods not clearly labeled in Nigerian markets?
Who’s watching the herbicides being used in our farms?
Where is the public education on chemical safety?
In a country where food safety is a luxury, ignorance is a death sentence.
Don’t wait until it hits your home.
Ask. Question. Demand accountability.
Because in this game of silent harvests, the only thing growing faster than the crops is the cancer rate.
Written for advocacy and awareness. For educational use only.

