NAFDAC
destroys N500m worth of counterfeit drugs in Anambra
The National Agency for Food, Drug
Administration and Control, NAFDAC, has destroyed counterfeit and unwholesome
drugs worth N500 million in Anambra.
The Director-General of NAFDAC, Dr Paul Orhii,
disclosed this on Friday while setting the products ablaze in a dumpsite in
Awka. Orhii said the unwholesome drugs were mostly surrendered by traders
across the state, while adding that the destruction exercise was aimed at
preventing the re-introduction of the products into the market.
“The products destroyed today are made up of
counterfeit and fake anti-malaria, anti-hypertensive, anti-biotic,
anti-diabetics, analgesics, injectables of various kinds, multi-vitamin seized
by NAFDAC from the manufacturers, importers and distributors in Anambra state.
“As well as expired pharmaceutical products
voluntarily handed over by Onitsha Head-Bridge Drug Market Union and compliant
companies in line with regulatory guidelines. “If not for the vigilance and
timely interventions of NAFDAC, these expired and unwholesome products would
have found their way into circulation and their use would have resulted in
therapeutic failure, drug resistance, adverse drug reactions, kidney failure,
liver failure and death.
“I wish to reiterate our stance on zero tolerance
on fake and counterfeit drugs and other NAFDAC regulated products and also
state that the Agency will leave no stone unturned in eradicating these
products from our society,” Orhii warned.
While noting that the fight against
counterfeit drugs is a continuous exercise, he said that NAFDAC would not
relent in the fight. “It is in this spirit that I am soliciting for the
unrelenting support of the government of Anambra state, all stakeholders,
traditional rulers, religious leaders, the Nigerian Police Force, the Nigerian
Custom Services, NDLEA, SON and other sister agencies, the press to sustain the
tempo of the fight.”
Orhii tasked Nigerians to report any
violation involving NAFDAC regulated product to the agency’s state office or
formation; adding that genuine manufacturers, importers of NAFDAC regulated
products should continue doing the right thing. Speaking earlier, the Zonal
Co-ordinator of NAFDAC South-East, Mr Dauda Gimba, also called for collective
fight against counterfeit drugs.
The Chairman of Onitsha Drug Market Union, Mr
Uche Eze, said that the members of the union voluntarily surrendered most of
the drugs after imbibing the appeals by the executives of the union for them to
abide by NAFDAC rules.
“The appeal we have been drumming to
the ears of our union members on the dangers of selling or distributing
unwholesome or expired drugs is yielding desired results; that is why they
willingly surrendered most of the drugs, which are expired or had lose their
efficacy due to their storage condition.
“We would continue to work closely with NAFDAC
since its regulation is for the benefit of everyone and it would make our
market and the products we sell more credible both to our local and foreign
customers,” Eze said.
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