The National Agency for Food and Drug Administration and Control has destroyed fake drugs worth N600m in Kano State.
The agency said the feat was achieved in conjunction with the state
government “following a month-long crackdown on various illegal and
clandestine pharmaceutical outlets across the state.”
A statement issued on Friday night by NAFDAC’s Deputy Director (Public
Relations & Protocol Unit), Mr. Abubakar Jimoh, said its
Director-General, Dr. Paul Orhii and the Kano State Governor, Mr. Rabiu
Kwankwaso, jointly supervised the burning of more than 10 trailer loads
of counterfeit drugs conveyed to the Kano city dumpsite.
Among the burnt drugs were hundreds of cartons of counterfeit
Chloroquine, banned Analgin injections and 14 million tablets of
Tramoldine drugs often abused by commercial vehicle drivers and
motorcyclists valued at over N135m.
In a speech at the event, Orhii praised Kano for its bold initiative in partnering NAFDAC to check the menace of fake drugs.
He said, “NAFDAC has introduced innovative, multi-layered and
well-coordinated strategies to fight drug counterfeiting. The use of
cutting-edge technologies such as TRUSCAN and Mobile Authentication
Service has made NAFDAC one of the top 20 medicine regulatory agencies
in the world.
“The seizure and destruction of N600m fake drugs in Kano historic
because as a commercial nerve centre and hub for distribution of drugs
to other states and neighbouring countries, the dislodging of
counterfeiters from the state will help wipe out such spurious medicines
and even unwholesome processed foods in other parts of the country”.
The statement quoted a “visibly angry Governor Kwankwaso” as saying his
government had declared a battle against drug counterfeiters in the
state. He vowed not to “leave any stone unturned until those merchants
of deaths vacate the state.”
The governor announced December 31, 2012, as the final deadline for drug
dealers in Sabon-gari market, Kano to “relocate their businesses as the
market has been declared illegal for sale of medicines.”
Kwankwaso said the state government was committed to qualitative health
care delivery to her citizens and would strive to protect the integrity
and safety of medicine supply chains.
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