Harboursandport.com: The National Agency for Food and Drugs Administration and Control, NAFDAC, on Monday destroyed unwholesome goods worth about N1.32 billion in the South East zone.
The items, which were generated from five
states of Abia, Anambra, Ebonyi, Enugu and Imo, included drugs, cosmetics,
beverages and other regulated products.
Prof. Mojisola Adeyeye, the Director-General
General of the agency, said the destroyed goods were expired, substandard,
counterfeited and banned items which were voluntarily surrendered, seized and
ordered for destruction by the courts.
Adeyeye, who was represented by Mr Kingsley
Ejiofor, the Director Investigation and Enforcement at NAFDAC, said that 80 per
cent of the destroyed items were drug related products.
She said NAFDAC had zero tolerance for
counterfeit products as they posed serious danger to public and individual
health and encouraged Nigerians to report cases of suspected unwholesome
products for appropriate action.
“The cost of what is being destroyed is
valued at about N1.32 billion and 80 per cent is drugs, others are cosmetics
and other regulated products.
“Imagine if these products are in
circulation, consider what it will mean to public health; that is why we are
encouraging people to report cases of counterfeited, expired and suspected
unwholesome products to NAFDAC,” he said.
Mrs Olajumoke Ojetokun, the Enugu Zonal
Coordinator of NAFDAC, commended the agency’s stakeholders for the success of
the exercise.
Ojetokun said that NAFDAC warehouses and
offices in the zone were filled with such unwholesome products because of the
positive disposition of its stakeholders to its sanitisation efforts.
She said the agency was determined to ensure that the entire South East
markets for all NAFDAC regulated product were free of expired, counterfeited,
banned and unwholesome products.
On his part, Mr Obianika Okafor, the General
Manager of E.I. Ejison, one of the stakeholders who voluntarily surrendered its
product to NAFDAC, said it was important to also prosecute offenders after
seizures.
Okafor said the company observed a production
error in a batch of one of its products, recalled it and called on NAFDAC for
handover and destruction.
He, however, urged producers and importers to
ensure that their products fulfilled all quality and certification processes to
avoid the colossal economic loss related to seizures and destruction by the
regulatory body.
No comments:
Post a Comment