Tag: NAFDAC

  • NAFDAC seizes container of explosive chemicals

    NAFDAC seizes container of explosive chemicals

    The National Agency for Food Drug Administration and Control (NAFDAC) has seized a container load of Urea Formaldehyde Resin, purported to be sodium sulphate, allegedly imported by a firm, without approval.

     The company was said to have through its syndicate taken the container to warehouse outside Lagos. Urea-formaldehyde resin is any of a class of synthetic resins obtained by chemical combination of urea (a solid crystal obtained from ammonia) and formaldehyde (a highly reactive gas obtained from methane).

    NAFDAC said the syndicate specialised in smuggling containers of controlled substances out of the ports.

    Addressing reporters in Lagos yesterday, NAFDAC Acting Director-General Mrs Yetunde Oni said the warehouse was later found to be in Omu–Ijebu, in Ogun State.

    “Our officers have successfully evacuated the violative product to NAFDAC warehouse. The Managing Director of Six Six Manufacturing Global Services Limited, Zhao Shou Chum and his clearing agent, Christian Ohia of Actus Fidel Nigeria Limited were arrested, interrogated and their statements taken. They have given investigators useful information and are assisting NAFDAC to unravel their supply chain,” she said.

    Mrs Oni said the use of Urea could have grave security implication for the nation, hence the strict control of its importation.

    She said: “But for the timely intervention of NAFDAC, the consignment smuggled out of the port may have found its way to unscrupulous individuals for use in nefarious activities. I want to re-assure the general public of the resolve of the agency to sustain the fight against counterfeiters and smugglers of NAFDAC regulated products and also wish to appeal to members of the public to report any suspicious activity relating to NAFDAC regulated products around their environment to the nearest NAFDAC office.”

  • NAFDAC warns supermarket operators against foreign goods

    NAFDAC warns supermarket operators against foreign goods

    The National Agency for  Food and Drug Administration and Control (NAFDAC) has warned supermarket operators to adhere to the rule on foreign goods.

    Its Acting Director-General, Mrs Yetunde Oni, at a stakeholders’ forum organised by the agency in Lagos, said it expects that foreign stocks on supermarkets’shelves would have been exhausted before  December 31.

    NAFDAC, Oni stressed, will not tolerate the violation, infraction or deviation from the approved guideline of the global listing scheme.

    The global listing rule includes: that the importation of products banned by the government shall not be allowed; ‘mandatory’ fortified food shall not be allowed, that is salt, flour except they have been fortified to the levels prescribed in the food Grade (Table or Cooking); salt regulations and the Food Fortification with Vitamin A Regulations; supermarket operators can only retail the imported items once listed and distributed within their supermarket chain only, among others.

    Oni noted that the need to accommodate the supermarket operators, fast food chains, hotels, embassies and international organisations that house peculiar and large number of products, led to the introduction of the global listing scheme in 2003.

    The NAFDAC boss listed the items on the import prohibition list not be found in the supermarkets to include: live or dead birds including frozen poultry, pork, beef, birds, eggs, refined vegetable oil (except linseed, castor and olive oils), spaghetti or noodles, fruit juices in retail packs or waters, including mineral waters and aerated waters containing added sugar or sweetening matter or flavour, soaps and detergent and cane or beet sugar.

    She enjoined supermarket operators to patronise made-in-Nigeria products as it will help create jobs and boost the economy in line with government’s change mantra.

  • NAFDAC commissions agrochemical facility

    NAFDAC commissions agrochemical facility

    Acting Director-General of the National Agency for Food and Drugs Administration and Control (NAFDAC) Mrs. Yetunde Oni, officially opened and commissioned the multimillion Naira production facility of the Association of Animal – Health and Agrochemicals Producers (Nigeria) at a befitting ceremony, in Ijegun, Lagos yesterday.

    According to the chairman of the Association, Mr. Babatunde Adewoye in his welcome address, the N200 million facility has three manufacturing sections to produce insecticides, herbicides, agrochemicals and cosmetics, vitamins for animals, antibiotics to tackle all manner of animal diseases and many others.

    Represented by her personal assistant, Mr. Williams Effiok, Mrs. Oni said NAFDAC has so much passion for the association for taking a bold step to set up the gigantic facility capable of manufacturing animal health and agrochemicals for farmers which were hitherto depleting our foreign exchange.

    Said Yetunde Oni: “NAFDAC appreciates this facility project where agrochemicals, pet-care products, vitamins/premixes and animal Health medication and other products for farmers are being manufactured. We are now in business together, having gone so far, going through all the rigours of training, and meeting all the rules, regulations of the Agency, and producing goods of international standard.”

    She charged the manufacturers to maintain the quality, efficacy and good standard of their products as NAFDAC would continue to inspect their

  • Nafdac to commission  local manufacturers’ facility

    Nafdac to commission local manufacturers’ facility

    Acting Director – General of National Agency for Food Drugs Administration and Control (NAFDAC), Mrs Yetunde Oni, will next week commission the multimillion naira production facilities of the Association of Animal- Health and Agrochemical Producers (Nigeria).

    The event holds at Ijegun area of Alimosho Local Government, Lagos at 10:00am on Thursday, according to the National Chairman of the Association, MrTundeAdewoye.

    Adewoye said over 35 animal and agro-allied products of international standard had been produced by members of the association and registered by NAFDAC. He said eminent personalities in the industry, government, and top officials of NAFDAC are expected to grace the occasion.

  • NAFDAC workers urge Buhari to  appoint new DG

    NAFDAC workers urge Buhari to appoint new DG

    Workers of the National Agency for Food and Drug Administration and Control (NAFDAC), under the aegis of Medical and Health Workers’ Union of Nigeria (MHWUN), have urged President Muhammadu Buhari to appoint a substantive director-general for the agency to avert its collapse.

    MHWUN chairman at NAFDAC, Comrade Anzaku Peter Joseph, addressed reporters yesterday in Lagos on the plight of the workers.

    The union leader regretted that the workers’ grievances, which were tabled before the former Director-General, Dr Paul Orhii, with the intervention of the Minister for Health, Prof. Isaac Adewole, were jettisoned by the current administration.

    He said the development had paralysed NAFDAC’s activities.

    Joseph said the agency’s acting Director-General, Mrs Y. O. Oni, was part of its crisis, which forced the workers to go on strike many times.

    Joseph said: “Therefore, she should go on her terminal leave before the agency is plunged into a mess.”

    According to him, despite the intervention of the stakeholders on the workers’ plight, the acting director-general refused to follow the minister’s order that she should resolve the internal crisis in the agency and tender a salary structure for the ministry to approve.

    Joseph recalled that a letter was sent to the management in which the union gave a week ultimatum for it to address its grievances, “otherwise, the union will embark on an indefinite strike, if that is the only language the management understands”.

  • Killer Tomato Paste: NAFDAC to blame- Stakeholders

    Killer Tomato Paste: NAFDAC to blame- Stakeholders

    • No dangerous or injurious substance found- NAFDAC
    • Committee to check out Asian factories, others

     

    The National Agency for Food and Drugs Administration and Control, NAFDAC has been put on the spot over the importation of  fake, substandard and Cancer causing tomato paste into Nigeria.

    The stakeholders like Erisco Foods Limited, Dangote and Savannah Foods, that spoke before the House of Representatives joint committees on Healthcare Services and Drugs and Narcotics investigating the issue said NAFDAC has a report on the hazardous tomato paste coming into the country from Asian Countries, but has failed to act on it.

    The Chairman of Erisco Foods Limited, Chief Eric Umeofia while making his presentation accused NAFDAC point blank of colluding with foreign nationals to short- change Nigerians.

    His words:  “You will also discover that despite the recommendation by the Food Safety Analysis and Nutrition Directorate of NAFDAC to mop up all the fake tomato pastes and immediately ban the importation of the offending products from China, NAFDAC under Paul Orrhi and the current Acting DG have refused to save Nigerians from the scourge of fake tomato pastes.

    ” Rather, Dr. Paul Orhii chose to threaten to close our factory down for exposing them and the current acting NAFDAC Director General followed his predecessor’s position by still supporting more substandard tomato paste importers to continue dump in Nigeria till we are closed down.

    “Meanwhile all our attempts to duly inform Nigerians of the existence of this dangerous brands of tomato pastes were frustrated by NAFDAC as they refused to approve our advertisements even after we had adhered to all their suggested amendments.”

    The representatives of Dangote Foods, Abdulkarim Kaita and Savannah Farms, Abdulahi all wondered why NAFDAC has failed to act on a report that was over a year old.

    The report done by the Food Safety and Applied Nutrition Directorate and dated 10th February, 2015 states in part:

    ” Following  food safety concerns in the quality of branded tomato paste in retail packs imported from China and distributed and sold n Nigeria, an approval was given to conduct a pilot survey/ study of such ” tomato,paste products in retail packs (Tins/Sachets).

    “Total number of samples purchased and submitted to laboratory, 330. Total number of samples released, 314. Total number found unsatisfactory due to tomato content, 286 ( 91.1 percent). Total number with satisfactory tomato, 28 (Total number awaiting release from laboratory, 16. Percentage unsatisfactory 8.9 percent.”

    The Acting Permanent Secretary of the Ministry of Health, Mrs. Modupe Chukwuma deferred to NAFDAC to respond to the lawmakers queries and the allegations collusion.

    However, NAFDAC represented by Prof. Samson Adebayo said it was wrong for the stakeholders to accuse it of collusion or non- action on the report.

    Adebayo said: ” I wish to state that NAFDAC has not been compromised by any importer or group to destroy Nigeria as alleged by some groups.

    The main goal of Erisco is to create a monopoly of imports from China as he also imports from China.

    He said though the Agency has information that some substandard tomato paste were being imported, the agency tested “and as at then did not find anything injurious or dangerous. We never tested for carcinogenic substances, so where did Erisco get its information?”

    The Bank of Industry, BoI was represented by Lolo Kadafa, Group head, food processing group and she stated that BOI as a finance institution supports in its entirety the curbing of the menace of importing of substandard goods into the country.

    “The mandate of the institution is to support the industrialization of the country by providing funding of SMEs. The bank does not support the importation of finished goods.

    “The bank does not have in its portfolio the companies that are importing from Asia, especially the one under investigation for substandard tomatoes paste.”

    Earlier, the Chairman, House Committee on Health care services, Hon. Chike Okafor in his opening address said: “You will recall recently that media houses were awash with the publications about alleged importation of tomato pastes from some Asian countries by some importers, which were found to contain carcinogens and other contaminants that are hazardous and injurious to health and unfit for human consumption.

    “The allegation created panic,mistrust, fear and is suspected to be responsible for high cost and scarcity of tomatoes in the country.”

    He threatened that any of the company that fails to submit its product for testing, will be categorized as substandard.

     

  • Dora Akunyili – Exceptional leader worth remembering

    Dora Akunyili – Exceptional leader worth remembering

    The saying: “Great leaders don’t set out to be a leader; they only set out to make a difference”, is apt in describing only few Nigerians like late Dora Nkem Akunyili (OFR), former Director General of National Agency for Food and Drug Administration and Control (NAFDAC). It is another June 7th, marking the second year of your glorious departure from planet earth, thus the Association of Credible Leadership in Nigeria (ACLN) acknowledges her struggles and numerous achievements targeted at repositioning Nigeria.

    Born in Makurdi, Benue State, Akunyili started her educational career with a distinction in her First School Leaving Certificate at St. Patrick’s Primary School, Isuofia, Anambra State in 1966, and the West African School Certificate (WASC) with Grade I Distinction in 1973 from Queen of the Rosary Secondary School, Nsukka, Nigeria.

    All through her career from school days up till the professional level, there have been traces of exceptional leadership characters, many of which were eventually seen by a larger population of Nigerians when she became the DG of NAFDAC in April 2001. For Dora Akunyili, everything she found herself doing was more than the ROLE, but about the GOAL to achieve.

    She was Nigeria’s Honourable Minister of Information and Communications until December 16, 2010, when she resigned to further actualise her ambition of becoming the Senator representing Anambra Central in the National Assembly. She is an internationally renowned Pharmacist, Pharmacologist, Erudite Scholar, Seasoned Administrator, and a visionary leader. She has gained international recognition and won hundreds of awards for her work in pharmacology, public health and human rights.

    That being said, one would have thought her brilliance and impressive leadership lifestyle would flicker with the pressure from workplace. Instead, Akunyili prepared herself for the administrative position at NAFDAC by her four years stretch as Zonal Secretary of Petroleum Special Trust Fund (PTF), coordinating all projects in the five south-eastern states of Nigeria (Abia, Anambra, Ebonyi, Enugu and Imo States).

    Recall that while serving at PTF under President Muhammadu Buhari, she took ill and was given a scary diagnosis in a medical facility in Nigeria which necessitated her going to the United Kingdom for treatment. The PTF gave her the medical expenses, but upon arriving in the UK, she was told that she was misdiagnosed and that she would be all right without treatment. Her exceptional virtues were evidenced when she returned to Nigeria and refunded the medical expenses to the agency. Impressive! In the history of Nigeria, no political office holder has done such neither has anyone broken her record?

    The late DG of NAFDAC did everything within her capacity for the good of Nigeria without strings attached. Before she became the Minister of Information and Communication, the world had a very negative perception of Nigeria. This poor image was dumbed upon Nigeria by the international community and further affirmed by the bad behaviour of our conventional politicians, political clergymen and clerics both within and outside the country. This disheartening perception about Nigeria had gone unchallenged for so long that it is beginning to stick in the consciousness of most people around the world that most Nigerians are criminals or fraudsters, yet no one could do anything to redeem the situation.

    For this, when she became Minister in 2008, she lamented: “…At airports and other public places across the globe, whenever the green passport is sighted, we were asked to stand aside for special screening. We are not even given the benefit of the doubt. In the highly competitive world in which we live, Nigeria will have no choice than to present a compelling and coherent image to the world if she wants to be taken seriously.”

    Thus, on March 17, 2009, she joined President Goodluck Jonathan to launch a national campaign and unveiling of the slogan and logo in Abuja. According to her, “this campaign is beyond logo and slogan which are meant to serve as drivers. Thus, our hope is that the slogan, Nigeria – Good People, Great Nation, will help to inspire patriotism in us all as we collectively tackle the challenges ahead.”

    At this juncture, the ACLN can boldly describe Dora Akunyili as an outstanding Nigerian whose records of excellent public service will for long be remembered as against our current stomach infrastructure public office holders, whose entire public work has little credit for the good of the general public. Akunyili was never hunted by anti-graft agencies, neither was she accused by any segment of the country for being politically, religiously or even tribally biased. Her duties targeted the general wellness of Nigerians. She neither led a flambouyantly lifestyle nor found rendering eye service. For Akunyili, it was always Nigeria first.

    Her virtues as a leader are worthy of emulation for every public office holder in Nigeria, Africa and the entire world. In some other parts of the world, People like her are put on stamps and on statues at different public places where the younger generations who were either too young to see her good works or the generation yet unborn as at that time, can visit to be encouraged to lead selfless lifestyles. She saved lives and she instituted a system that is still saving lives. Akunyili is a leader per excellence.

    On this day, June 7, the ACLN admonish young Nigerians to follow in the part of Akunyili for the high sense of responsibility and how she helped to save the lives of Nigerians fighting killer diseases like malaria and tuberculosis with little more than sugar syrup and chalk tablets, cynically packaged to look like the real thing. Dora Akunyili, we believe in the Nigeria you foresaw and will continue to hoist the flag of Nigeria in a positive light across the globe because we believe in selfless leaders like you. Live On Akunyili!

     

  • NAFDAC to end drugs hawking

    NAFDAC to end drugs hawking

    Acting Director-General of the National Agency for Food and Drug Administration and Control (NAFDAC) Mrs. Yetunde Oni has promised to rid the country of drugs hawkers.

    She spoke at the weekend during a courtesy visit to the Kano State Governor Dr. Abdullahi Umar Ganduje.

    Mrs Oni said: “The task of safe guarding the health of the nation, which is the key mandate of NAFFDAC, is one task that NAFDAC cannot accomplish alone.

    “Although a hawker may claim that he or she has genuine drugs in his or her wares, but whether we like it or not, the drug loses potency because when they are hawked.

    “They are not hawked under the right storage condition and so, over time, they loss their potency. They could have been of the right quality at the beginning, but having lost potency, they become substandard products and we don’t want that!

    “Another major challenge facing us today is the upsurge in drug abuse among our youth, who are the future of tomorrow and it is gratifying to note that Kano has taken the lead and is doing a lot in the area of rehabilitating our children who have taken to drugs.”

    She went on:  “At NAFDAC, while we are committed to making available control medicine for medicinal and scientific purposes only. We recognised the fact that controlled drugs can be diverted to illicit use and abuse. This is why we your assistance to intensify surveillance and continuously monitor the supply, distribution chain for transparency and integrity.

    “There is the need for NAFDAC to be established in two other senatorial districts within Kano State. When we have these offices, NAFDAC will be closer to the grassroots to perform our regulatory functions and rid Kano State of the menace of counterfeit and unregulated products,” she said.

    Ganduje agreed that there is a need for a strong presence of NAFDAC in the state.

    “I am happy when you announced that you will want to open two offices in two senatorial districts and coincidentally, the headquarters of those senatorial districts are major routes of getting into Kano or going outside Kano to other states of the federation.”

  • NAFDAC seals bakeries, sachet water factories in Kaduna

    National Agency for Food, Drugs Administration and Control, (NAFDAC) on Tuesday raided and sealed several factories including bakeries and sachet water factories that did not meet up the requirements for production of goods in Kaduna.

    Among the manufacturing outlets sealed are; A1 Bakery in Kakuri which also has a water company producing Alvine and faking other companies products, Ubas sachet Water Company in Rigassa, Simfort water in Kakuri among others.

    While some of the companies fall short of the basic registration requirements, others operate below minimum hygienic standard.

    Addressing journalists during the raid, accompanied by police and other staff of the Agency, Dadi Mullah, Head of Kaduna NAFDAC office explained that many of the companies were closed down because it did not meet the minimum requirements for a place where people should be offered water to drink or bread to eat.

    He therefore said, the places would be Condone off and sealed because it is unhygienic.

    He contended that people should now know that these products are not good for consumption.

    Some of the products includes the A1 bread and Alvine sachet water and Nena water which is been produced next to a public toilet, Simfort and Ubas water adding that “It there were seriously non compliant.”

    Mullah said a decent company should be compliant with adequate materials, not zinc and the production process is suppose to be certified, the personnel should be certified medically and these basic materials are not on ground in many of the places visited.

    Many of the sachet water were in an unregistered environment, producing, two or more different types of water as it tickles their fancy.

    In one of the sachet company in Kaduna, Achine Simon, the Manager said, he did run away from the factory, but that he was not producing because of lack of water from water board, saying that is why he was not in the office.

    He however said he was preparing to start cleaning the environment before NAFDAC officials stormed the place.

     

  • NAFDAC mulls review of imported food registration

    NAFDAC mulls review of imported food registration

    The National Agency for Food and Drug Administration and Control (NAFDAC) may refuse  reregistration of imported food products that have spent more than five years without establishing a local production plant.

    Acting Director-General, NAFDAC, Mrs  Yetunde Oni, gave this hint to reporters after  declaring open food Nigeria Exhibition and Conference in Lagos yesterday.

    Currently, NAFDAC grants licenses  to reputable foreign  products manufactured outside Nigeria, after an application must  have been by a Nigerian representative of the foreign manufacturer. The representative of a foreign manufacturer must however have a duly executed Power of Attorney from the manufacturer, appointing and authorising him/it to act in that capacity for such products.

    Mrs  Oni noted that while Nigeria has opened doors to safe  food imports that  are register able  locally, the agency is  interested  in foreign food products manufacturers  that are ready  to establish  local plants, transfer  technology and  create  jobs for Nigerians.

    She advised representatives of foreign companies with products registered with the agency to consider establishing their plants in Nigeria.

    She reiterated that the organisation is interested in food products that are safe for consumption and urged importers of food products intended for introduction into Nigeria to ensure products are safe and meet health standard requirements.