Tag: cpc

  • ‘70 % of textile workers lose jobs to fake products’

    Over 70 per cent of textile workers in Nigeria have lost their jobs to closure of textile manufacturing companies and fake clothing materials from China, just as global counterfeiting estimate  could hit N1.7trilion by next year, an Executive of International Trademark Association (INTA), Lara Kayode, has said.

    Speaking on the sidelines of a stakeholders’ summit on counterfeiting of products in Nigeria, Lara, whose organisation is committed to curbing the proliferation of counterfeiting goods through advocacy, said  companies and manufacturers have lost huge revenue to the activities of fake producers.

    She said: “Findings reveal that over 70 per cent of textile workers in Nigeria have lost their jobs to closure of manufacturing companies and the emergence of counterfeiting products from China.’’

    Lara, also a Principal Partner O.K. Kayode & Co, said billions of naira had been lost to fake clothing materials, mostly from China. She said since 2001,   many textile firms have closed due to bad economy, failure of the Federal Government to regulate importation of goods to the country, porous borders, among other issues.

    Also, the Director-General, Consumers Protection Council(CPC), Dupe Atoki, said plans were underway to establish consumers protection council department in all major institutions across the country to fight the menace.

    She said it was expensive to push laws in the National Assembly, noting that the government was doing a lot to ‘curb counterfeiters through policies and legislations. She said there was the need for stakeholders to unite and see how they would use lobby to influence the passage of laws and to stop incidence of fake products in the country.

    “We are working with the Standard Organisation of Nigeria(SON) on how to provide strong enforcement programs to halt the trend. Very soon, the two bodies would go to town to provide strong implementation mechanisms on the issue of fake products,’’ she added.

  • CPC vs. NBC/CCNL: Probing the half-filled bottles

    CPC vs. NBC/CCNL: Probing the half-filled bottles

    There is no end to the battle between Consumer Protection Council and the Nigerian Bottling Company (NBC)/Coca Cola Company Nigeria over  cases of half-filled bottles of Sprite and Fantas but stakeholders urge the regulator to dialogue rather than use combative means to enhance quality control,   writes ADEDEJI ADEMIGBUJI.

    The battle between the Consumer Protection Council (CPC) and Coca-Cola Nigeria Limited and its Nigerian franchise, the Nigerian Bottling Company (NBC) over an alleged breach of the CPC Act, is yet to abate. The battle which ensued early in the year as a result of a product complaint investigation involving half-filled cans of Sprite, has snowballed into a legal battle.

    The council ordered the companies which manufacture Coke, Sprite, Fanta and Five Alive, among other numerous drink brands, to subject their manufacturing processes to the scrutiny of inspection for a period of 12 months, which did not go down well with the company.

    “The order requires Nigerian Bottling Company and Coca-Cola Nigeria Limited to: subject their manufacturing process to the council’s inspection for a period of 12 months to ensure compliance with safety standards and regulations; formulate and make available to the Council a Shelf Life Policy within 90 days to facilitate the removal of expired products from the market; review within 90 days their grievance resolution policy to : address compensation for injuries, or compensation in instances where replacement will be inadequate; review their supply chain management policy within 90 days to include retailers in order to minimise the distribution,” the Director-General of the CPC, Mrs. Dupe Atoki, said.

    To show its seriousness, the Federal Government, a fortnight ago dragged the NBC Limited, Coca-Cola Nigeria Limited and their Chief Executives before a Federal High Court in Abuja for alleged criminal breach of the CPC Act.

    But as the case is before court of competent jurisdiction, stakeholders are asking CPC to employ dialogue and collaboration as the means of settling such issue. They said globally, this approach has worked and as Nigeria is becoming a global market for global brands, regulatory authorities should change its approach from combative to collaborative.

    Presently, the Nigerian Employers Consultative Council (NECA) and the Association of Food, Beverages and Tobacco Employees (AFBTE) are part of the stakeholders working to ensure that the council drops charges against the indicted firms as the case in question, half-filled bottles, does not warrant such a legal tango and a fine of N100 million.

    “It is important in the national interest, that the CPC safeguards both consumer and industry interests through balanced regulation. After all, regulators exist because there is an industry to regulate and these industries are critical drivers of the economy that Nigerians are duty bound to contribute to building not pulling down!,” said a public affairs analyst, Sopuru Uwadiegwu.

    He said error do occur during production process and such is also an happenstance across the globe but it would be wrong for anyone to attempt to make a defence for Coca-Cola and NBC because there can be no justification for defective products. “It is equally wrong to deny that manufacturing error is a fact of life in every industry and every country, including the most advanced ones. What is important in such situation is to ensure that industry is not deliberately endangering consumers and society by condoning such errors,” he said.

    In what looked like a combative regulation, he said: “What is curious in the CPC vs Coca-Cola and NBC case is the whopping fine of N100 million for an offence that was described as ‘two half-filled cans of Sprite’ and also the regulator’s apparent preference to fight the court case in the media,” he said.

    He stated that CPC should also be encouraged to balance consumer, industry and national interest via regulation.

    Meanwhile, the trial of the Nigerian Bottling Company (NBC) Plc and Coca-Cola Nigeria Limited (CCNL) and their respective Managing Directors could not go on at the Federal High Court, Abuja last week Monday because the trial judge, Justice Evoh Chukwu, did not sit. He was said to be attending a conference somewhere. The case was adjourned till December 1. But industry observers believe that before then CPC and NBC with Coca-Cola should have met to find alternative way to end the dispute.

    In a joint statement signed by the Public Affairs & Communications Manager, Coca-Cola Nigeria Limited, Mr. Clem Ugorji and the Head, Public Affairs and Communications, Nigerian Bottling Company Limited (NBC), Adeyanju Olomola in respect of the CPC findings, the companies said: “Each organisation cooperated with the council in the course of the investigation and provided the information available to it in varying respects including but not limited to quality assurance, product handling and consumer complaints resolution processes which have been updated over the years. It is regrettable that the Council’s conclusions and recommendations do not appear to have acknowledged the information.

    “As responsible organisations, NBC and CCNL take all matters relating to products very seriously and remain committed to maintaining the highest international quality management and food safety standards and certifications. Because consumers are at the heart of everything we do, both organisations also take a responsive approach towards satisfying customers and consumers. Nigerian Bottling Company Limited and Coca Cola Nigeria Limited hold the council and indeed, all regulators and stakeholders in high esteem and will continue to work with them to make any necessary improvement.”

     

     

  • Why barons of   fake products are smiling to the banks

    Why barons of fake products are smiling to the banks

    Though a global phenomenon, Nigeria’s share of the boom in the importation, manufacturing, distribution, and consumption of substandard products has assumed endemic and life-threatening proportion. The problem, which has left sour taste in the mouth of consumers and operators in all sectors, continues to defy measures put in place by the authorities to contain it, reports Assist. Editor Chikodi Okereocha

    It Is extremely difficult these days to extract a smile from the Chairman of DN Meyer Plc, Sir Remi Omotoso, particularly when the state of Nigeria’s manufacturing sector is the focus of discussion. The 69-year old industrialist wears a long face every time he remembers the heavy toll the unbridled importation, production, distribution and consumption of fake and substandard products is taking on manufacturers and, by implication, the economy.

    “If you look at how manufacturers are affected by products faking and importation of substandard materials you shudder. Many of them are suffering a lot,” he pointed out, in an interview with The Nation.

    Giving more insight into how the booming trade in substandard products is taking the shine off manufacturers, Omotoso, a former Director General of Lagos Chamber of Commerce and Industry (LCCI), said: “You can’t export freely because our products will not be able to pass international standards test. Not the ones we produce, but the ones that are faked affect the ones that are genuine. They go and put the label of a good product on a bad product and once they get out of the shores of the country nobody knows which one that was genuinely produced and the one that was faked. Its a major threat to our economy.”

    Lagos lawyer and public affairs analyst Obiora Akabogu agrees with him. “The free reign of importers of substandard products is killing the home industry, and it’s a threat to the economy,” Akabogu said, accusing the regulatory agencies of being incompetent.

    According to him, the agencies charged with regulating standards and protecting the interest of consumers have performed below average. The fight against substandard products, he observed, has been “one step forward, two steps backward”.

    He observed that in the case of Standards Organisation of Nigeria (SON), for instance, it was at the zenith of the sterling performance of National Agency for Food, Drug Administration and Control (NAFDAC) under the late Prof. Dora Akunyili that the leadership of SON decided to make its voice heard and its impact felt. He said shortly after Mrs Akunyili’s exit from the agency, SON, which got its stimulus for performance from NAFDAC, lost steam. Same for NAFDAC, which he said has retrogressed following the exit of  the late Akunyili.

    Akabogu recalled, for instance, that during the late Mrs Akunyili’s era, there were cases where full containers of essential drugs were imported into the country and when their efficacy and potency were tested, it was found out that they were reduced by about 60 per cent. Subsequently the drugs were duly seized and set on fire and the perpetrators prosecuted while their offices were sealed. He regretted that such scenario, which used to be a daily occurrence in places like Aba, Onitsha, Ibadan, Kano, and Lagos, but were contained by NAFDAC, is gradually coming back.

    “The bad guys (importers of fake and substandard products) are back. It is business-as-usual. The fight against fake drugs died with Akunyili, leaving the average Nigerians exposed daily to inconsumable and substandard products,” Akabogu said, noting that the menace of substandard products has become endemic and life-threatening, posing health risk to consumers and putting tremendous pressure on the local economy. He said the situation was regrettable, considering the billions of naira voted to the agencies  annually, including the billions of naira received from donor agencies and development partners.

    There has been growing concern over the preponderance of adulterated or substandard products in the country. Many consumers who purchase products like foods, beverages, pharmaceutical drugs, batteries, tyres, paint, electrical cables, bulbs and mobile phones have been raising issues over the quality and standard of products in markets. For instance, within the first year of its existence, the Lagos Office of ConsumerProtection Council (CPC) was inundated with between 20-30 of such consumer complaints every month. About three years later, the number of complaints rose to between 500-800 every month, according to Tam Tamunokonbia, Head, Lagos Office of CPC.

    Tamunokonbia told The Nation that the increased number of consumer complaints is an indication of increased awareness following the adoption of the use of social media so that consumers could reach the CPC on e-mail, twitter and Facebook, adding that the prevalence rate of substandard products  is higher in the Southeast, particularly in places such as Cemetery Market in Aba, Abia State, Ogbaru Market in Onitsha, Anambra State, as well as the Enugu market.

    “The people manufacturing substandard products are more in certain markets in Aba and Onitsha. In Lagos you see pockets of such people. Lagos being what it is, you still have some hide-outs where those things still happen. But if you put the whole of Nigeria in perspective, then the prevalent rate should be about 40 per cent because you could have some in Kano, some in the north, some in the South-south. But in  terms of percentage I would give 40 per cent to the South east and probably 10 per cent here and there,” he explained.

    Throwing more light on how the counterfeiting is done, he said after the production of the substandard products, they are transported out of the South east to various markets in the Southsouth such as Port-Harcourt and Calabar, including Lagos in the Southwest, depending on the manufacturer’s calculation of profit  margin. He noted that there is a degree of production of substandard products in the country, and that the unscrupulous producers usually make arrangements for the labeling outside Nigeria, in China, for instance.

    He said: “When we carried out a raid recently in Cemetery Market in Aba, we discovered peak milk was being produced. To our surprise they had already imported the label of the sachet powdered peak milk from China. The label was just the same, exactly the same powdered peak milk label.”

    That was not the only shocker. Tamunokonbia said for the tin milk, his men discovered that the producers picked the tin from scavengers or from dustbin, washed them and cleaned them up. “So the label is still the same; everything is the same so consumers would not be able to know the difference,” he said, adding that there are some products as well that are produced outside the country in which case the Council is working in collaboration with other relevant agencies to halt the illicit trade.

    For those who produce substandard products locally, their usual excuse is that the nation’s huge infrastructure gap, particularly power, puts tremendous pressure on their operations. Some of them argue that rising cost of raw materials and provision of power eats into their profit margin, forcing them to thinker with the quality of their products to remain in business. What this means is that if the operating environment were to be more friendly, they would have been producing quality products. But Akabogu describes this position as false. According to him, Nigeria is an import-dependent economy, with Nigerians as mere importers, wholesalers, and retailers. He said most of the substandard products are manufactured in Asia and imported into Nigeria, exposing consumers to all manner of health risk.

    Tamunokonbia said the CPC is living up to its mandate to protect consumers. Established by Act No. 66 of 1992, the CPC, a parastatal supervised by the Federal Ministry of Trade and Investment, commenced operations in 1999, when its institutional framework was put in place. The Council has the mandate to, among others, eliminate hazardous products from the market, provide speedy redress to consumers’ complaints, and undertake campaigns as will lead to increased consumer awareness.

    It was in the course of carrying out its mandate that the CPC recently uncovered the sale of a brand of cigarette, ESSE EDGE, in the Nigerian markets with a post-dated production date of September, 2014. The product is said to be distributed in Nigeria by Black Horse Tobacco Company, but made in Korea by Korea Tobacco and Ginseng Corporation (KT&G). CPC stated that  falsifying the production date of the ESSE EDGE cigarette was a calculated attempt to manipulate the cigarette’s shelf life and keep it in the market longer than required, thereby constituting grave health hazards to consumers.

    The agency said in view of its resolve to raise awareness on the value of checking the BB (Best Before) date of products, it has commenced the removal of the defective ESSE EDGE cigarette from the market. It, however, cautioned the public, including wholesalers, retailers and consumers to beware of the defective cigarette, whose actual date of manufacture is unknown, and to report any manipulation to it. The Council also advised wholesalers, retailers and consumers to always check the date of manufacture on their pack of cigarettes and all other products before they purchase.

    Tamunokonbia said since the launch of the ‘Check the BB Date Campaign’ by the Minister of Industry, Trade and investment, Dr. Olusegun Aganga, the Lagos Office has taken the campaign a notch higher by conducting a road show that went through most of the supermarkets in Lagos. “We have given a warning that sellers who do not comply with this campaign after six months will be arrested and persecuted,” he said, adding that the six-months notice started July 1, 2014 at the end of which the Council will do a sustained surveillance whereby its enforcement officers will be visiting shops, supermarkets and market places to do seizures and to also arrest.

    CPC also handed down an ultimatum to product dealers to stop indiscriminate storing, which could undermine the quality of products. At the launch of the campaign in Abuja, CPC Director General, Mrs. Dupe Atoki, frowned at the storing of some products in the Nigerian market-place, claiming that it has been undermining the quality of the products. “It is also common knowledge that even when not expired, the quality of most products gets compromised when stored under harsh weather conditions”, she noted.

    Mrs. Atoki also said it is worrisome that most super stores across the country stock their bottled water and beverages under direct sunlight in front of their shops for weeks on end. The practice of storing such items under the sun, she said, is unacceptable as it negates the storage conditions stipulated for them by the manufacturers, thereby exposing consumers to injury.  She gave dealers six months with effect from July 1 to find alternative ways of storing such products or have them withdrawn from the market. She charged manufacturers to use the six-month period of moratorium to train all those in their distribution chain on how best to store their products, and to stock only products that they can store properly.

     

    SON intensifies campaign

     

    A survey by SON puts the prevalence rate of substandard products in the country at between 80 and 85 per cent. The survey was done about three years ago when its current Director General (DG), Dr. Joseph Odumodu assumed office. The result of the survey wasscary and unacceptable considering the fact that in Egypt and Kenya, for instance, only 40 per cent of products are said to be substandard. South Africa’s was less than 30 per cent.

    The agency, however, said the level of substandard products in Nigeria has dropped from 85 per cent to 50 per cent in the last two years following the intensification of its ‘Zero Tolerance’ campaign. It added that it is determined to further reduce the prevalence of substandard goods to 30 per cent. The Public Relations Officer (PRO) of SON, Mr. Mathias Bassey. told The Nation that  Nigerians are already imbibing the culture of zero tolerance for substandard products. He said the increasing awareness of Nigerians is on the strength of various initiatives, programmes and sensitisation efforts of the agency. Apart from SON’s ‘Zero Tolerance’ campaign,  the agency, he said, had put in place the SON Off Shore Conformity Assessment Programme (SONCAP), Manufacturers Association of Nigeria Conformity Assessment Programme (MANCAP), as well as embarked on several market surveys and enforcement exercises.

    While SONCAP aimed at ensuring that products are easily identifiable by providing that before a trader orders goods, the importer must  get a certificate for all regulated products before shipment into Nigeria, MANCAP ensures that any product made in Nigeria carry the MANCAP certificate as well as the Nigeria Industrial Standards (NIS) certificate.

    In insisting on MANCAP, the agency said it found out that people were bringing in goods from all kinds of places and avoiding the ports.

    The agency claims that the programmes are paying off. For instance, Odumodu disclosed recently that the level of certified domestic products improved to 13 per cent from the less than 10 per cent obtained in 2011. He put the number of MANCAP-Certified companies in 2013 at 546, while certified products in 2013 were 821. He said many consumer products are now registered and captured on the SON website with 6, 899 registered products and 927 registered companies so far.

    On the other hand, the re-engineered SONCAP regime, Odumodu said, has significantly improved compliance with extant import conformity regulations. He added that sensitisation campaigns and engagement were held across the six geo-political zones of the country, and that survey confirmed 65 per cent level of consumer awareness on substandard products. Importers at the Alaba International market and traders in the Computer village, both in Lagos, as well as others in other popular markets across the country are said to have benefited from the sensitisation programme of SON aimed at stamping out substandard products.

    Also, the agency has engaged in capacity building consumer engagement (market desks, road shows, advertising, and enlightenment campaign to educate the masses. The compliance monitoring efforts of SON are also said to have yielded fruit. For instance, SON has reviewed and enforced standards in the roofing sheet sub sector of the nation’s building construction industry. Conformity to standards in steel development is also said to have led to quality improvement, resulting in a glut of quality steel bars in the country, just as the agency has addressed local capacity and quality in the cement sub sector.

    Bassey added that SON’s collaborative effort with relevant stakeholders and industry associations particularly block moulders is also yielding good results. He was however, quick to point out that “spreading the culture of zero tolerance to substandard products is neither a one-day affair nor a one man’s job; it requires the effort of all, and it will take time.”

    He disclosed that the National Quality Policy (NQP), which seeks to produce a broad-based system that would provide quality specifications for all manufactured products in the country, is still before the National Assembly for approval.

    A war, its many challenges

    Despite the sustained campaign by the standard/enforcement agencies to contain the reign of substandard products, the problem persists. This, Kola Oladipo, former Chairman, Export Group of MAN, attributes to poor funding, inadequate staffing of the agencies, and corruption at the ports. Oladipo is right. For instance, while the Lagos Office of CPC is looking forward to an increase in the number of consumer complaints from about 500 to 1, 000 a month, given the large population of the commercial city of Lagos, Tamunokonbia said he has his fears.

    “My greatest fear is that when this complaint increases to a thousand mark plus, can we cope? Because as it is, my members of staff are over-stretched. We are supposed to have a department for surveillance and enforcement, which is the department that handles complaints. Because we don’t have such department, what that has  done is to stretch everybody,” he said.

    Apart from the challenge of inadequate staffing, The Nation learnt that the few staff on the payroll of the agencies are poorly motivated. Akabogu said that this is why some members of staff of the agencies allegedly compromise.

    “They (agency staff) compromise because of fear of the unknown; many of them are wary of what will happen to them after retirement. So, some of them want to get anything they can from the system before they retire,” he said.

    The public affairs analyst also identified lack of conviction by the judiciary as another factor. According to him, in China, offences relating to dealing in substandard products carry life sentences or even death penalty. “Ask any of the agencies to give you statistics or data on conviction of offenders, you will be disappointed they don’t have any,” he said.

    For Omotoso, SON appears to be overwhelmed.

    “Maybe because the scope SON is covering is so wide, from table, pin, electrical cables, bulbs, all sort of things; the scope they have to police is so wide, maybe that’s part of the problem of their inability to do all that they need to do,” he said, noting that this perhaps explains why the war against substandard products is not being won, and is not limited to paint manufacturing alone.

    “Put your mind to tyres. Till date, I don’t think we have fought the battle of preventing fake tyres from coming into this country. Fake tyres are as dangerous and life threatening as fake malaria products,” he said.

    In fairness to SON, however, the nation’s porous borders through which most of the suspected substandard products find their way into the country, are not helping the fight.

    The Comptroller General of the Nigeria Immigration Service (NIS), David Parradang, recently revealed that there are over 1, 400 illegal routes into Nigeria – 1,316 more than the approved number of border control posts. He said the 84 approved border controls cover 4, 047 kilometres, the total length of Nigeria’s land border. Ogun and Adamawa states, for example, have 83 and 80 illegal posts. To make matters worse, those entrusted with the task of securing the borders are ill-equipped to effectively monitor the 84 regular routes let alone the 1,400 illegal ones.

    The threat posed by illegal borders to the fight against substandard products is not lost on the agencies.

    “We are not at the borders; the CPC is not allowed to be at the borders, and there are substandard products that come in from the borders, its difficult for us to know,” Tamunokonbia said.

    He explained that once the substandard products are in the country, they are taken to warehouses from where they are moved into the various markets and unless the agency knows, they cannot arrest the perpetrators.

    “We think that if we arrest them from the border, it will make more sense. In fact, what you will be doing is that you will have a large cache of those products because they will come in their trailers. But in the market place, we are only seizing drops of the products,” he stated, adding however, that he recently paid a courtesy call on the Lagos Zonal Comptroller of Nigeria Customs Service (NCS) to solicit his assistance since CPC is not at the borders.

    Tamunokonbia expressed optimism that his approach will work, as the Zonal Comptroller admitted that the Customs too also needs information “because as customs they do not necessarily know which product is fake and substandard. Their duty is just to collect tax. Their training does not allow them to know which one is fake and which is not, but if NAFDAC is there and it is a product of food and drugs they should be able to know. Also, if SON is there they will also know, same CPC. So, we want to partner with them, we want to work with them.”

    The need to work with relevant agencies is underscored by the perceived lack of coordination and sometimes, overlap of interests and activities, which sometimes result to disagreements amongst the agencies. Dr. Odumodu admits that Nigeria’s standard operation was faced with many challenges arising partly from the lack of NQP to hold the system and make it functional and efficient enough to earn global confidence.

    Indeed, over time, operations of government agencies set up to regulate and ensure good standards, such as SON, NAFDAC, Nigerian Communications Commission (NCC), National Universities Commission (NUC), National Judicial Council (NJC), Police, and Public Service Commission, among others, have been uncoordinated because of the lack of a framework. Each of the agencies operates independently and, in some cases, on ad hoc basis, diminishing the fighting spirit of the agencies.

    If the war must be won

    To begin with, Akabogu suggests that the fight against substandard products must be inculcated into the national ideology and included in the school curricula from primary to university level. He said that way, enough awareness would be created. He also said the hands of the regulatory agencies, including SON, NAFDAC, CPC, and NCC, among others, must be immediately strengthened through adequate staffing and funding. He added that there is need to weed out bad elements within the agencies and allow only people willing to leave a legacy remain. Besides, laws against the business must be made punitive to serve as deterrent.

    Omotoso could not agrees. He insisted that punitive measures should be enforced.

    His words: “The laws are there, but somehow there is a lot of compromise. Who are those people that compromise? Those that are supposed to be enforcing the law. When they are taking to court, somehow the process is slow and those that are perpetrating this evils know that the courts won’t get round to them even before they pass on so, they just do the most havoc they could. I don’t want to say the courts are corrupt. No. But the process of justice is too slow to make the enforcement of the laws effective.”

    The industrialist is not done. He said civil servants who are employees of SON should also be a little bit more aggressive in pursuing the culprits, while their facility for detection must be upped. He added that staff of the agencies should be encouraged by way of some forms of motivations for them to be able to do their job such that they will even want to say no to any offer of bribe from any of the perpetrators of the evil. “I am passionate about this because I know they do a lot of damage to the economy of this country, he concluded.

    Oladipo aligns with Bassey who earlier noted that standards is not a one man job, so everybody must come on board. “SON cannot go it alone,” Oladipo told The Nation, arguing that since manufacturers are more spread “they should go all out to look for those who clone their products.” He admonished manufacturers to rise up to the fight.

    For Champions of Development Nigeria (CDN), an integrated approach to quality management in Nigeria is required. The group’s President, Mr. Jonas Yomi, stated that the harmonisation of regulatory agencies and quality policies was overdue if Nigeria was determined to establish a national quality infrastructure, which is an important tool for implementing NQP. The group also lamented the non-existence or insignificant number of accredited laboratories in Nigeria, noting that accredited labs are the backbone of valid testing results without which products or services cannot be said to be certified or conforming to requirements. He added that there is need to reach out across the whole spectrum of stakeholders through road shows as well as sustained mass media campaign.

    Sound and far-reaching recommendations, no doubt. But again their implementation, to a very large extent, depends on how far government musters the political will to prosecute the war, and of course, how far Nigerians and concerned stakeholders put their hand on deck to contain the upsurge. But until and unless this is done, unscrupulous businessmen importing substandard products will continue to smile to the bank while local manufacturers groan under the stiff competition from imports.

  • Safety: Shelf-life policy takes centre stage

    Safety: Shelf-life policy takes centre stage

    Worried by the preponderance of expired consumer products in the market, particularly edibles, the Consumer Protection Council (CPC), has stepped up its campaign to stamp out the sale of expired products by driving the shelf-life policy for consumer products. TONIA ‘DIYAN, reports.

    A few years ago, a lady stormed the Consumer Protection Council (CPC) office, brandishing a particular product she said her family often used. “This does not taste like the product we are used to; it is fake,” she charged at an official of the Council. The official immediately accompanied her to where she bought the product. On getting to the place, the seller did not deny selling the product to her, but said without any remorse: “Well, I am not the manufacturer.” After hot exchanges, the seller was compelled to either replace the product with the original or refund the lady’s money.

    However, the story did not end there. The seller also disclosed where he got his supply from. It was at this point officials of the CPC visited the firm where the product was supposedly manufactured only to discover that it was imported. Alarmed, the CPC officials stormed the market where the products were packed and displayed for sale to unsuspecting consumers. The products were mopped up. The CPC also went on air alerting citizens of the dangers of patronising the expired product.

    Following the incident, the CPC has stepped up the Shelf Life Policy campaign particularly as it relates to consumer products, especially edibles. According to the consumer rights protection agency, the Shelf Life Policy is an international policy that no manufacturer can fault and it must be strictly adhered to. The CPC explained that after the expiration date of a product (i.e. the shelf life span expires), it no longer becomes safe for consumption.

    However, some unscrupulous producers in Nigeria, without recourse to the dangers of selling expired products, have refused to adhere strictly to the policy, according to the Council.

    A case in point is Coca-Cola Company, which, according to the CPC, allegedly does not have a detailed written shelf life policy for dealing with expired products. This was discovered after a thorough investigation by the agency, which also went a step further, reassuring consumers that such products will be removed from the market. “In a case like that of Coca-Cola, the role of the agency is to investigate, draw the attention of the manufacturer and where necessary, make an order as to how there would be standard compliance. That is exactly what we have done. Mr. Tam Tamunokonbia, Head of the CPC, Lagos Office, told The Nation Business Shopping.

    He explained that CPC carried out a full scale investigation where the manufacturers, Coca-Cola was involved. He said that although, the company may have one or two explanations, the reality on ground is what the Council issued to them as an order. “We made an order for them to change their processes and comply with the order,” he said, adding, “I do not know why some companies have refused to have this policy (Shelf Life Policy). All companies are aware of its importance as an international policy. They are also aware that the policy is part of the standard of production in the country. Therefore, as an agency that protects the consumer, we expect total compliance.”

    The CPC official enjoined every manufacturer to be sincere to the consumers and take special measures to ensure that things are done correctly. “Consumers should be taken into consideration while producing products for their consumption. It is because of the consumer that these manufacturers exist in the first place and so, companies involved in production have to carry out their production processes accordingly,” he argued. He promised that the agency would continue with its investigative roles, as well as its surveillance and enforcement activities in the market place with a  mandate to enforce standards, laws, regulations and policies set up by the Standards Organisation of Nigeria (SON) and other sector regulators.

    While SON has the function to set standards, policies and regulations, the CPC, by Section 12 of the CPC Act, enforces them. Every law that is meant for the protection of the consumer is enforceable by the CPC. According to the agency, there are also sanctions for manufacturers who refuse to facilitate the removal of expired products from the market. The CPC has the power to remove from the market place products that are expired, fake or sub-standard, according to Section 2 of its law. This means that once a product does not have its shelf life or meet standard labelling requirements, the Council has the right to remove it from the market and to sanction the manufacturer of such product. The Council can also prosecute offenders, but in most cases, prosecutions come as a last resort. This is usually after its order has been flouted or not complied with.

    However, to guard against consumers’ unconscious purchase and consumption of hazardous items that are off their shelf life, the Council constantly carries out thorough investigations to ensure that such identified products are quickly removed from the markets. For the CPC, this is a responsibility that they will not back down on. They will continue to engage in the removal of the harmful products and also bring sanctions against companies suspected to be manufacturing or dealing in such products.

    As Mr. Tamunokonbia explained: “Consumers can seek redress by complaining to the CPC free of charge. We are available throughout the country; we are in all the six geo-political zones. We have a Liaison Office in Lagos, market desk at Alaba International market and Computer Village. Complaints could be made by sending an email to cpcnigeria@yahoo.co.uk or cpc.lagos@yahoo.co.uk. Most importantly, every consumer owes himself a duty of thoroughly checking the item he is buying before actually making the purchase and if he notices any foul play, he should immediately contact the manufacturer. At that level, in most cases, the consumer may get his money back or a product replacement. If the manufacturer does not want such a case to get to the CPC, he may choose to resolve it diligently. But if such a consumer is still not satisfied, he should seek redress by coming to the Council.”

    He further said imported products without shelf life policy would be traced to where they were bought and who imported or manufactured them. He added that consumers should expect protection in all areas of goods and services.

    His words: “The protection we provide is that the man who buys gets value for his money and if everybody gets value for his money, there will be no need for complaints. But our economy is not yet completely there, so part of the protection is to educate and sensitise Nigerians though it is expensive. We encourage Nigerians to complain whenever they have problems. We also encourage manufacturers and sellers that they have a duty, an obligation to ensure that they explain everything about a product or service to the consumers. If you do not explain to the consumer how to use your product effectively, how would they know?” he asked.

    While insisting that the consumer has a right to education and information, he pointed out that most of the complaints from consumers of electricity, for instance, have to do with estimated billings by the power distribution companies. This was why Tamunokonbia visited the Managing Director/Chief Executive Officer (MD/CEO) of the Ikeja Electricity Distribution Company, O. C. Akamnonu where he said his company buys power and distributes same to Nigerians. He assured the Council that those who had meters (not prepaid meters) are paying according to what their meters read.

    Akamnonu also informed the council that the company, in the next few weeks, would come up with a meter policy, which would address the concerns of consumers using prepaid meters and others including a system that will be able to read meters from a central place. However, Akamnonu complained that some consumers refuse to pay their bills as at when due. The Council however, insisted that Nigerians pay for what they consume.

    Apart from the power sector, the CPC is also tracking the online marketing companies, an emerging market. Two weeks ago, the head of Lagos office took a trip to the office of one of these online marketing companies in Lagos following complaints from consumers. They online marketing companies, in their defence, told CPC that they operate according to strict standards and that they are also working on a strategy to replace, within two weeks, products that did not meet consumers’ specifications. However, if the process take much longer than that, the consumer would have to formally notify them since it takes a longer process to resolve cases that exceed two weeks.

    The CPC has also had course to beam its searchlight on the banking sector following consumer complaints that have to do with the use of the automated teller machines (ATMs), unearned bank charges and non-disclosure to customers. Same for the petroleum sector where the CPC, in some cases, was informed at the filling stations that the Department of Petroleum Resources (DPR) is the only agency of government authorised to monitor them, which is why operators of such filling stations refuse to cooperate with the CPC officials.

    The CPC is, however, optimistic that the situation would change soon when people understand the functions of the agency. Already, the National Assembly is currently amending the laws to make it compulsory for every sector regulator to send to them their consumer complaints reports monthly.

  • CPC marks World Consumer Right Day

    Last Saturday was World Consumer Right Day. And to commemorate the day, the Lagos office of the Consumer Protection Council (CPC) organised a Road Show during which it visited some areas in the metropolis.

    The Road Show, which started about 7.30am at the Lagos State Television grounds, Agidingbi, Ikeja, ended at the Computer Village also in Ikeja, Lagos.

    Other areas visited were Maryland, Ojuelegba, Mushin and Oshodi.

    The theme of the event was “Fix your phone rights”. It informed the choice of the venue, Computer Village. The aim was to make phone regulators and firms more accountable to the consumer.

    The Head, CPC, Lagos, Mr. Tam Tamunokonbia said: “With the growth of telephone services and the manufacturing of mobile phones, land phones and different smart phones, fakers are getting to know that there are also smarter ways of producing sub-standard mobile devices that are actually passed off to consumers as original brands.

    “So, we want to draw the attention of the world and that of Nigerians to the consumers’ rights to quality phones. Nigerians have consumer rights or what we call telephone rights and these are the rights we want to focus on so that we can bring them into the consciousness that every Nigerian can have their rights protected.”

    President of the Phone and Allied Products Dealers Association (PAPGA), Mr. Ike Nwosu, said: “This is a wonderful initiative. We have heard from the horse’s mouth and have also been made to understand the policy of the CPC. We will abide by the policy and work in accordance with the council. However, consumers should endeavour to make purchases from stores located inside the market and not from hoodlums hanging around the premises.”

  • Maku and the defections from PDP

    Maku and the defections from PDP

    Last Wednesday, Information Minister, Labaran Makun, launched a blistering attack on members of his ruling Peoples Democratic Party (PDP) who defected recently to the new opposition All Progressives Congress (APC), an amalgam of the Action Congress of Nigeria (ACN), the All Nigeria Peoples Party (ANPP), the Congress for Progressive Change (CPC) and a faction of the All Progressives Grand Alliance (APGA).

    The defectors, the minister said, were “like the Fulani nomads; they move from one party to another without shame. It shouldn’t be something we should cherish.”

    The minister launched his rather gratuitous offensive during a news briefing in Abuja, the federal capital, on the outcome of the day’s Federal Executive Council meeting.

    In launching his attack on the defectors he singled out the governors of Kano State, Dr Rabi’u Kwankwaso, and his Sokoto counterpart, Alhaji Aliyu Wamakko. They were, he said, undemocratic desperados who parachuted themselves into the APC and hijacked it from its founders.

    Their defections, he said, were however good for the party; akin to an obese person shedding undesirable fat to live a healthier and more robust life. (I am not so sure it would be wise for PDP to be so smug as the youthful minister; between Kano and Sokoto states there are relatively nearly as many voters – over seven million – as the entire Southsouth put together, with their nearly nine million).

    Maku’s unflattering comparison of the defections with the nomadic lifestyle of Fulanis has been rightly condemned by many as ethnicist. However, I agree completely with the underlying assumption of his diatribe which is that any defection based on ego or personal ambition rather than on a sublime principle is a thing to be condemned.

    The trouble with Maku’s angry words, however, was that they were not based on any principle. Rather they were simply meant to please his political godfathers. Otherwise, it would have occurred to him before he spoke that his harsh words would be truer of former governor of Kano State, Malam Ibrahim Shekarau, and his Sokoto State counterpart, Alhaji Attahiru Dalhatu Bafarawa, who subsequently traded places with their successors by defecting to the PDP. This realisation would have advised him to have been more careful in his choice of words against Kwankwaso and Wamakko.

    Take Bafarawa first. Nearly twelve years ago, on March 28, 2002 to be precise, the former Sokoto governor, as guest speaker at the second anniversary of the founding of the Arewa Consultative Forum, had only harsh words to describe what he said was the marginalisation of the North by the PDP under former president, General Olusegun Obasanjo. “Ogun and Oyo alone,” he said, in the course of his lecture to the applause of his large audience, “have benefitted from over N30 billion worth of road projects, more than what 12 states that make up Northwest and Northeast together enjoyed.”

    His answer to this marginalisation, he said, was Northern unity, pointing out that “While the West is AD 100%, the South-south and the South-east are PDP 100% … the North is 50% APP and 50% PDP.”

    He concluded that it was therefore “imperative that, at least for the sake of future presidential elections, we must all go one direction…United we stand, divided we fall.”

    Without prejudice to the merit or otherwise of his preference for the politics of regional monolithism, a preference which lacks any basis in our political history because opposition forces had always thrived in the old regions, one must ask what has changed between now and when Obasanjo left office seven years ago to justify Bafarawa’s defection to the PDP. The truth, as Bafarawa knows all too well, is that the North has been marginalised even more under President Goodluck Jonathan’s PDP than under Obasanjo’s.

    Exactly eight years to the day he was guest speaker at the ACF’s second anniversary, he said in a lengthy interview in The Nation (March 28, 2010) that he would never join PDP because being in opposition was the only way to deepen democracy in Nigeria. This was after he left ANPP in frustration, following his accusation that PDP had planted Chief Donald Etiebet as ANPP’s chairman to serve as a fifth columnist.

    Instead of joining PDP, he said, he decided to form his own Democratic Peoples Party (DPP) on whose platform he eventually contested the 2011 presidential election. Naming then PDP chair, Dr. Ahmadu Ali, and then acting president, Goodluck Jonathan, as his witnesses, he claimed Obasanjo offered him the control of Sokoto, Kebbi and Zamfara states by ceding the nomination of their governorship candidates to him, if he would join PDP. He said he rejected the offer.

    The Nation: What is in PDP that is making you run away from it?

    Bafarawa: I don’t believe in joining PDP because I want to help democracy grow…When there is challenge in democracy, then the government will move but if there is no opposition, there is no democracy.”

    Makes you wonder, doesn’t it, what has changed about the PDP’s proverbial “garrison democracy” four years after the former Sokoto governor’s encounter with editors of The Nation that it has now suddenly become a beacon of democracy without the threat of a viable opposition party.

    Obviously, Bafarawa needs a better excuse than the ones he’s been giving us for his defection to a party that before now he had regarded as simply incapable of fostering democracy. And what is true of Bafarawa is even truer of the former Kano State governor, Malam Ibrahim Shekarau.

    Only late last year at a conference organised by the Movement for Better Future and Democratic Emancipation in Kaduna on September 7, 2013, he dismissed President Jonathan as a “total failure.”

    “My assessment,” he said then, “is that the government is a total failure… The only answer to this failure is to get the right people to do it.”

    Makes you wonder, doesn’t it, how within a short spell of five months the president has, in the former governor’s eyes, become the only right person to take Nigeria to now “do it.”

    For this intelligent and highly eloquent former teacher-turned-politician who, most Nigerians agreed, emerged the clear winner of the 2011 Presidential debate – what with, in the words of BBC News (April 5, 2011) “his eloquence, a calm disposition and an apparent grasp of policy issues” – to now sing praises of a president he thought unworthy of his office not too long ago, it speaks volumes about the courage and integrity of the self-declared convictions of our politicians.

    Of course, real elections are won not by debating skills alone. In free and fair elections that have defied this country, politicians win on the strength of their character and performance. The long history of carpet crossing between parties in this country and the manner in which our youthful minister of Information, Labaran Maku, heaped scorn on those who defected to the opposition party is proof positive that it would be a great miracle if next year’s election is, for once, won, not on the basis of propaganda, but on the basis of character and performance.

     

    Re: Babangida’s triumph of hope over reality

    Sir,

    So IBB does not as a Nigerian, a former president, war veteran, leader, elder statesman, etc, etc, have the right to say his mind and air his views on any national issue, without you attacking him.

    So Gen IBB is wrong and you are right. How selfish, self-centered and confused you are.

    Are you attacking IBB to please your pay masters or you have nothing to write or you want to be heard loud and clear because you attacked IBB?

    You (have) many issues to write about so why wait for IBB to speak, you then attack him? He has been very kind to you and your family. He does not deserve any attack from you on pages of newspapers, more so when you have direct access to him and can see him at any time you so wish.

    Who is sponsoring you against IBB? Who is afraid of IBB?

    Please have a re-think and kindly desist. IBB only said his mind, simple and clear and he has the right to.

    Hassan Muhammad Jallo.

     

    Sir,

    Does it matter if there are hitches in a society? And despite General Babangida’s optimism, yours was “pessimism” all through! Remember, you have benefitted from this same wobbled system and you are still benefitting. Give encouragement and support to our leaders rather than sanctions and ridicule!

    Lanre Oseni.

     

     

     

     

  • Coalition to launch campaign for standardisation of cement

    Coalition to launch campaign for standardisation of cement

    A BIG battle – standar-disation of cement production and importation – is on the way in the construction industry.

    Leading the battle are major civil society groups and professionals, who will be pushing for 42.5 grade of cement as the standard product in Nigeria.

    The main aim, The Nation learnt yesterday, is to tackle building collapse – a phenomenon that has killed thousands.

    The lower grade cement (32.5) is common in Nigeria – no thanks to weak regulation. The popular thinking is that the Standard Organisation of Nigeria (SON) seems not to be doing enough.

    The battle plan includes:

    •pushing for the National Assembly to probe manufacturers and importers for compromising standards;

    •enlisting the Consumer Protection Council (CPC) to give SON a wake-up call;

    •enforcing the National Building Code; and

    •enlisting the Council of Registered Engineers of Nigeria (COREN) in fighting sub-standard cement.

    The coalition of civil society groups is to confront the Cement Manufacturers Association of Nigeria (CMAN) for what it called the poor standard of local and imported cement.

    To the activists, standard should not give way in the face of monetary gains – to the detriment of lives.

    According to them, in the advanced countries, the lower grade cement (32.5) is being dumped for the higher level (42.5) “and even 52.5”.

    “With a uniform standard set by government, manufacturers and importers can be held accountable whenever there is infraction or reduction in agreed specification,” they said.

    The coalition’s spokesperson, Mr. Tunde Ojo, blamed the Minister of Trade and Investment, Dr. Olusegun Aganga, for what he described as complicity with manufacturers and vowed to mobilise block makers nationwide against manufacturers and importers of poor quality cement. He did not, however, name them.

    In a working document titled: Cement: Standardisation, safety versus affordability and poor quality, the coalition writes:

    “How do you identify good quality cement; is it by the manufacturer’s name or by its composition or pigmentation, if you like? Many a people, whether literate or not, identify cement merely by producer’s name. So, it is common to see most people, builders and non-builders alike, identifying with Eagle Cement, for instance or Elephant Cement or Dangote Cement, Rock Cement, UNICEM, BUA and so on, just to mention but a few. It matters very little to most buyers or customers what the composition or the contents or pigmentation of the cement bag is. For many, what influences what brand of cement to buy is the price and, in most cases, the proximity to the point of usage.

    “What that means is that, in a cement market where you have displayed products from Lafarge, Dangote, UNICEM, Ibeto and Northern Cement Company of Nigeria, BUA, Ashaka, for instance, buying anyone as experience has shown, would essentially be a function of price and proximity. Not many, without stretching the argument too far, would be concerned, or are even conscious about quality. To them, they are all cement, the difference perhaps, is that between six and half-a-dozen. But it is beyond that.

    “Maintaining standards for all products’ range, there are standards. Cement may not be a drug, but it has fatalistic effects as it happens in bridges and buildings collapse when low quality specimens are used. And this has been a recurring decimal in Nigeria. The unfortunate thing is, those who are charged with the responsibility of investigating these recurring mishaps have never looked the way of the quality of cement used in some of these structures; rather, only the contractors bear the brunt. It is important that the Standards Organisation of Nigeria (SON), if they are the ones in charge, should take a closer look at the quality of cement churned out by local manufacturers and also the imported ones as well.”

    He went on: “Types of Cement; broadly speaking there are two, or may be three types of cement common in Nigeria. There’s the CEM 1 42.5 R and CEM 1 42.5 N on the one hand; and CEM 32.5 R, on the other hand. Besides, there are variants of these with different specifications. The CEM I 42.5 R and CEM I 42.5 N cements are produced with clinker and limestone in the ration of 95%: 5% respectively. The gypsum that is added during the grounding process is for adjustment of the setting period, which is usually obtained at the end of 28 days.

    “Among other applications, this cement is used when good strength concrete is required, especially in concrete productions requiring high strength, or early strength. Also, it is used in production of thin section reinforced concrete and in highly reinforced concrete buildings, among other uses. CEM II 32.5 is suitable for flooring and wall plastering (rendering).”

     

  • ‘No parallel APC interim  committee in Ondo’

    ‘No parallel APC interim committee in Ondo’

    Leaders of the defunct Congress for Progressive Change (CPC) in Ondo State have said that there is no parallel Interim Executive Committee within the All Progressives Congress(APC)in the state.

    They described the inauguration of the Mr. Rotimi Akeredolu- led Interim Executive Committee of the APC as a welcome development.

    According to them, there is no other committee in the state but the one launched penultimate week in Akure by the APC National Vice Chairman in the Southwest, Otunba Adeniyi Adebayo.

    They maintained that the committee was the only one saddled with the responsibility of putting the progressive party on the fast lane of development in Ondo.

    At a press briefing in Akure yesterday, the former CPC executives said those claiming to be members of the parallel committee were agents of some individuals in the corridors of power.

    In attendance at the briefing were the former CPC Vice Chairmen in the Central, North and South districts, Dr Wole Awoniyi, Chief Samuel Olaiya and Hon.Jimi Lumowo respectively as well as the Legal Adviser, Bosun Otitoju, among others.

    Also, factional members of the All Progressives Congress (APC) in the coastal area of Ilaje/Ese-Odo federal constituency have closed ranks ahead of the forthcoming bye-election into the vacant seat in the constituency.

    The reconciliation meeting presided over by Dr. Tai Malumi also witnessed mass defection of Labour Party members in Ilaje local government to the party.

    At the meeting were groups such as Ilaje Democratic Forum (IDF) and Legacy Group (LG),which comprised leaders of defunct ACN, CPC and ANPP in the area

    Malumi described the forth coming House of Representative bye-election in Ilaje/Ese-odo federal constituency as a testing ground for PDP, LP and APC.

     

    He was optimistic that APC candidate would perform well at the poll.

    For the party to succeed, he said all hands must be on decks, stressing that factionalisation would not augur well with the party.

    The APC chieftain said all the groups and factions possess qualities and political clouts needed for any party to excel but emphasise they must come together and work like a team.

  • CPC chief gets global award

    CPC chief gets global award

    The Director-General of Consumer Protection Council (CPC) Nigeria, Mrs Catherine Dupe Atoki, has received the Gusi Peace Prize International award in Manila, Philippines.

    The Gusi Peace Prize International award is the Asian model of the Nobel Peace Prize. It was conferred on the awardees at its 13th edition in Manila.

    Fifteen awardees, including Mrs Atoki, were selected for the award.

    The Gusi Peace Prize was founded by Chairman Barry Gusi, who continues the work of his late father, Gemeniano Javier Gusi.

    Mrs Atoki won the Human Rights Advocacy category by virtue of her advocacy on human rights in the African Union (AU).

    She served the organisation for six years in the African Union Commission on Human and Peoples Rights, the regional body for the protection and promotion of human rights in Africa.

    The award winner spent the last two years as its chairperson, making her the first Nigerian to head an AU organ. Five presidents were also among the laureates.

  • Chieftain urges APC supporters to shun personal interests

    Chieftain urges APC supporters to shun personal interests

    A chieftain of the All Progressives Congress (APC) in Ondo State, Prince Olufemi Adekanmbi, at the weekend lauded the inauguration of the Interim Committee of the party in the state.

    He urged the party’s leadership not to allow their personal ambition frustrate efforts of the party’s national executives to turn APC to the ruling party at the centre.

    Adekanmbi was reacting to the disagreement that trailed the inauguration of a 31-member interim Executive Committee in Ondo State.

    The Committee is chaired by the former governorship candidate of the defunct Action Congress of Nigeria (ACN) in the state, Mr. Oluwarotimi Akeredolu (SAN).

    At the ceremony, former Commissioner for Information, Prince Olu Adegboro, was appointed the Secretary and Chief Ebenezer Akinwekomi became the treasurer.

    Some groups led by a Special Adviser to Osun State Governor on Environment, Mr. Bola Ilori, and Chief Sola Iji, expressed grievances over the inauguration of the committee, saying the executives were not duly appointed.

    The group, which has members of the defunct Congress for Progressive Change (CPC) and All Nigeria Peoples Party (ANPP) in its fold, said strangers were picked for their own slots.

    Adekanmbi urged members of the party to work together as a team ahead of the 2015 general elections, saying the party cannot afford to lag behind in Ondo State again.

    The APC leader noted that this was not the best time for the leaders of the party to allow ambitions kill the vision of the party’s national leaders to change the fortune of the party in the state.

    While urging APC’s leadership at the national level to wade into the crisis, Adekanmbi said all other members of other political parties that merged to form the APC must be carried along in the party’s affairs to harmonise its members.