The National Agency for Food, Drug Administration and Control
(NAFDAC), yesterday raided Ontisha market and arrested seven persons who
specialised in production of fake wines and drugs.
The agency also sealed two wine factories and two patent drug shops
over alleged production of suspected fake products and fake drugs in the
area.
The Director for Investigation and Enforcement Mr. Kingsley Ejiofor
who led the operation yesterday said the raid was based on intelligence
report that led to the discovery of some of the factories that
specialised in production of fake wine of different types.
Ejiofor, explained that the exercise was part of their routine jobs
to checkmate all counterfeit and prohibited products, especially drugs,
but noted that in the process of their raid, they uncovered unhygienic
factories with cockroaches.
He maintained that those arrested were specifically involved in the
bottling of unwholesome, counterfeit and dangerous drinks, as well as,
those that deals with fake and unregistered drugs.
Ejiofor said that fake products confiscated includes brands of
beverages like, Hennessey, 501, Johnny Walker, Red Label whisky, Best
Marula fruit cream, Pure heaven, Amarula, Baron De Vals, Eva and J&W
Others include fake tramadol of 200mg, 225mg strength, which is not
meant to be sold at the market, UNFPA condom from UN meant to distribute
at the hospital, some expired and unregistered drugs and injection of
different types, some of the Aphrodisiac manpower drugs with high
strength of 3000 and unregistered and registered Alcoholic bitter drink.
He however listed items found in the factories sealed to include
stoves, colourants, plastic containers, cups, labels, corks,
unidentified chemicals and recycled bottles.
“In one of the shops, the smell was so pungent that we could not even
recover the materials and had to destroy them right there. It was
heartbreaking to discover that the factories were meant for illegal
manufacturers of bottle and dangerous chemicals known as fake wine and
spirits”. Ejiofor stated.
He further advised retailers and consumers to issue and collect
receipts for every product purchased to enable them to track the fakers
in the markets.
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