Tag: National Agency for Food and Drug Administration and Control

  • IFAD distributes N8.6m rice processing equipment to farmers

    IFAD distributes N8.6m rice processing equipment to farmers

    The International Fund for Agricultural Development ( IFAD ) – Value Chain Development Programme ( VCDP ) on Tuesday distributed rice processing equipment worth N8.6 million to five women farmers groups in Niger.

    The State Programme Coordinator ( SPC ), Dr. Mathew Ahmed, while distributing the equipment to the farmers in Minna on Tuesday, said the measure would go a long way in creating jobs.

    According to him, it will also ensure that local rice farmers produce the crop in line with international best practices.

    “We are here today to distribute rice processing machines to our farmers to enable them produce rice that will compete favourably with the foreign rice.

    “Many of the foreign rice we eat today in Nigeria are not better than our local rice because they are expired but our local rice is fresh.

    Read also: Edo, Delta, Cross River fish farmers get equipment

    “Some of the foreign rice we eat constitute health hazards, hence the need for VCDP to ensure food security,’’ he said.

    The equipment distributed included five rice de-stoners, 10 rice parboilers, and 46 manual sprayers.

    The coordinator said IFAD-VCDP would subsidise the cost of the equipment.

    He explained that the groups selected from the five participating local government areas in the VCDP applied for the equipment.

    The local governments include Bida, Wushishi, Kontagora, Shiroro and Katcha.

    He said that aside training the farmers in mechanised farming in the value chain, the programme also trained them in using first-bottom approach to parboil rice.

    “We are presently working with the National Agency for Food and Drug Administration and Control ( NAFDAC ) and Standards Organisation of Nigeria ( SON ) to make sure that our farmers adhere to international best practices that will make their product accepted across the globe,’’ he said.

    He said that there were 13,000 farmers participating in rice and cassava value chain in the state.

    In her remarks, Dr Amina Bello, wife of the state governor, Alhaji Abubakar Bello commended IFAD-VCDP, saying that it had added value to the state’s agriculture drive.

    She was represented by Mrs Kaltume Rufai, the Permanent Secretary, Niger State Ministry of Women Affairs and Social Development.

    Bello urged the beneficiaries to utilise the equipment to ensure success of the programme.

    Responding on behalf of one of the beneficiary groups,  Hajiya Hadiza Yunusa, Chairman, Nufawamasu Gumi Rice Producers Association, Bida said that before the coming of IFAD-VCDP the colour of their rice was not attractive and contained impurities.

    Yunusa said that the VCDP had trained them on modern ways of cultivating, processing and marketing rice.

    “Now we sell our rice and cassava to other West African countries, our customers even book in advance,’’ Yunusa said.

    NAN

  • Fake products: Court to rule on Tasty Time MD’s bail application

    Fake products: Court to rule on Tasty Time MD’s bail application

    A Federal High Court in Lagos on Monday fixed Nov. 7 for ruling on the bail application of the Managing Director of Tasty Time Nigeria Ltd, Isaac Kole, charged with manufacture of fake products.

    Kole, who was arraigned alongside his company — Tasty Time Nigeria Ltd, had pleaded not guilty to the charges.

    The News Agency of Nigeria (NAN) reports that the National Agency for Food and Drug Administration and Control (NAFDAC) had on Nov. 2 arraigned the accused on a four-count charge bordering on producing fake and unregistered products.

    Justice Hadiza Rabiu-Shagari had allowed the accused to continue with the administrative bail granted him and adjourned until Monday for the determination of his bail application.

    The judge had also ordered the accused to produce a director either from Federal or Lagos State Civil Service, who would sign an undertaking to produce him in court on the next adjournment.

    At the resumed hearing of the case on Monday, the case was again adjourned until Nov. 7 as the court did not sit.

    The prosecution alleged that Kole and his company had been using their plant to produce unregistered Tasty Time products.

    NAFDAC said the products include Tasty Time juice, Glucosaid Energy drink, Tasty Time Pops orange flavoured drink, Tasty Time Fitz Apple drink and Tasty Time mixed orange flavoured drink.

    The accused was also alleged to have packaged and labelled the products in a manner likely to create a wrong impression that they were genuine and also sold the unregistered products to the public.

    The offences, according to the prosecutor, Mrs Chinyere Okoli of NAFDAC, contravene the provisions of Sections 1(1), 5(a) and 5(e) of the Foods and Drugs Related Products Act, Laws of the Federation 2004.

  • Tasty Time MD in court over manufacture of unregistered products

    Tasty Time MD in court over manufacture of unregistered products

    The Managing Director of Tasty Time Nigeria Ltd, Isaac Kole, was on Thursday hauled up before a Federal High Court in Lagos over alleged manufacture of fake and unregistered products.

    The National Agency for Food and Drug Administration and Control (NAFDAC) arraigned the accused on a four-count charge bordering on producing fake products.

    Kole was arraigned alongside his company — Tasty Time Nigeria Ltd.

    In the charge,  NAFDAC’s Prosecutor, Mrs Okon Chinyere, alleged that Kole and his company had been using their plant to produce unregistered Tasty Time products.

    She identified the products as Tasty Time juice, Glucosaid Energy drink, Tasty Time Pops Orange flavoured drink, Tasty Time Fitz Apple drink and Tasty Time mixed Orange flavoured drink.

    The accused was also alleged to have packaged and labelled the products in a manner likely to create a wrong impression that they were genuine.

    NAFDAC alleged that the accused also sold the unregistered products to the public in contravention of sections 1(1), 5(a) and 5(e), of the Foods and Drugs related Products, Laws of the Federation, 2004.

    The accused pleaded not guilty to the charges.

    In a short ruling, Justice Hadiza Rabiu-Shagari, allowed the accused to continue on the administrative bail granted him and adjourned until Nov. 6 to determine his bail application.

    The judge, however, ordered the accused to produce a director either from a Federal or Lagos State Ministry or parastatal agency, who will sign an undertaking to produce him in court on next adjournment. (NAN)

  • SERVICOM decried lack of operational vehicles in NAFDAC

    SERVICOM decried lack of operational vehicles in NAFDAC

    SERVICOM National Coordinator, Mrs Nnenna Akajemeli has decried the lack of operational vehicles for field works at the National Agency for Food and Drug Administration and Control (NAFDAC).

    This is as SERVICOM also advised NAFDAC to do away with consultants, so as to guide against sharp practices.

    Akajemeli spoke on Friday while presenting the report of SERVICOM assessment of NAFDAC to it’s  new Acting Director General, Mr Ademola Mogbojuri.

    NAFDAC in the assessment was scored average, with two stars after carrying out an assessment on the eight offices across the country.

    SERVICOM used a set of business-relevant key performance Indicators that provide a standardized method for measuring and comparing performance against service standards defined by Ministries, Departments and Agencies (MDAs). It measures the key influences on service delivery and customer satisfaction as well as the need for feedback and future development. 

    Identifying some of the weaknesses of NAFDAC, Akajemeli said at the time of evaluation, the were inconsistencies on whether or not the agency deploys the use of consultants to facilitate the procurement of the agency’s service to customers. 

    Also, the dearth of operational vehicles for the agency’s field activities and this had hampered the efficacy of investigation activities, like enforcement directorate. 

    SERVICOM also noticed that NAFDAC was not in regular consultations with customers amongst other. 

    Akajemeli, therefore, urged NAFDAC to ensure continuous improvement on quality of service, while at the same time recommended requisite training for all categories of staff. 

    On consultancy, she advised that the management need to stop the individuals parading themselves as consultants of the agency so that members of the public are not taken undue advantage of. 

    SERVICOM, she said is in collaboration with NAFDAC as critical partners in actualizing the proposed service improvement plan. 

    In his reaction, the Acting Director-General, Magbojuri said the weaknesses identified would be working upon as the agency aims at becoming a leading government agency in service delivery. 

    He also urged staff of the agency to rise up to the challenge of turning around the fortune of the agency to an agency of excellence. 

  • Fanta, Vitamin C: ‘NBC must withdraw product now’

    Fanta, Vitamin C: ‘NBC must withdraw product now’

    The Vice Chancellor of Benson Idahosa University, Prof. Ernest Izevbigie has insisted that taking Vitamin C with Fanta and sprite soft drink could cause cancer and other health illness.

    He expressed concern over the non-compliance with the order of a Lagos High Court mandating the National Agency for Food and Drug Administration and Control (NAFDAC) to compel NBC to include a written warning that it would be dangerous to take the contents of the soft drinks with Vitamin C.

    He said the 90 days given by the court has since expired and that the NBC should have withdrawn the products until all the issues were resolved.

    Speaking at a press briefing at the university senate chambers, he said that it was worrisome that nothing had changed since the order from the court mandating NAFDAC to compel the Nigeria bottling company (NBC) to do the needful, adding that it was wrong for organizations to place profit ahead of human safety.

    Prof. Izevbigie, said that the institution stood by its research findings on the danger of taking Vitamin C with benzoic acid as in Fanta and Sprite, saying it was done in line with the mandate given to the University to impact knowledge, research and service to the country.

    “It is the university that should serve as an umpire. It is about us to give our expert opinion.”

    He explained that the review of the Scientific literature which examined the effect of temperature (20 o C, 60 o C and 100 o C) on the conversion of Benzoic acid to benzene shows, “an increase in benzene formation of as the temperature increased from 20 degree Celsius to 60 degree Celsius by approximately three fold (300%) in the absence of Vitamin C, and tenfold (1000%) in the presence of Vitamin C in 24 hours. It cannot be concluded the formation of benzene does not occur at 30 o C and 40 o C”.

    He said the colourant used in Fanta, the yellow sunset, had been implicated in cytotoxicity, carcinogenesis, allergies and hyper activity in children when the right amount is not used.

    On benzoic acid, he said the Federal Ministry of Health has explanation to give on the reason why standard given for it in soft drinks was put at 250mg/kg as opposed to 150mg/kg that was obtainable in the United Kingdom and Ghana.

    He further said that azo dyes do not occur in nature, they metabolise due to the presence of azo reductase enzymes in the body, which reduce the azo group to produce two compounds with amino groups.

    Prof Izevbigie, who noted that though the Nigerian standard was high owing to high temperature and that it still falls within the international standard, said pasteurization and the use of carbon dioxide can achieve the same goal as the use of high benzoic acid without the added health risks.

    He urged NAFDAC to live up to its responsibility in scientific research and regulation, adding that the issue of human safety must override business profit.

    He recommended a “reduction of the sodium benzoate concentration to below 150mg/kg, a removal of Vitamin C as an ingredient in Fanta due to concern for benzene toxicity and the use of natural dye as a replacement for the colourant in Fanta.”

  • Abia to establish 9,000-hectare free trade zone

    Gov. Okezie Ikpeazu of Abia on Tuesday said that the state would establish a 9,000- hectare free trade zone at its boundary with Rivers.

    Ikpeazu made this known when Chief Olabitan Famutimi, the National President of Nigerian-American Chamber of Commerce (NACC), visited him in his guest house in Aba.

    Ikpeazu said that the free trade zone was necessary to facilitate export of goods from the state.

    “Abia State delegation to Singapore has left the shores of Nigeria to come back with the final design of our free trade zone.

    “The free trade zone will occupy 9,000 hectare of land which has already been acquired in a location between Abia and Port Harcourt in Rivers.

    “The idea is to ensure unification of the economies of Abia and Rivers in the next 10 years,” he said.

    He also said that the state was working hard to get American endorsement for its products to facilitate their entry into the world market.

    “Endorsement by America that what we do in Abia State is good for its market is what we need to reach the world, and I hope to see this happen in our time,” he said.

    He said that Abia established a quality assurance management agency to collaborate with other related agencies in the country such as the Standards Organisation of Nigeria and National Agency for Food and Drug Administration and Control.

    The governor said that collaboration with such agencies would improve the quality of goods produced in the state.

    Ikpeazu said that the state was exporting over one million pairs of shoes, bags and other leather products to some African countries weekly.

    He added that about one million people worked in the industry.

    Earlier, the NACC president said that his team was in the state to help to promote its products.

    He said that African Growth and Opportunities Act (AGOA) had signed a MoU with the chamber to represent it in West Africa.

    He promised that through NACC and AGOA, the state would be given required business opportunities from America.

    Famutimi said that the chamber would establish an AGOA office in Abia with a desk officer to run it.

    He called for establishment of free trade zones in all states of the federation to improve the processing of products for export.

    Famutimi also called for the signing of MoU between Abia and NACC to ensure continued relationship.

     

  • VC tasks NAFDAC on safe food, beverages

    VC tasks NAFDAC on safe food, beverages

    The Vice-Chancellor of Ambrose Alli University (AAU), Ekpoma, Edo, Prof. Ignatius Onimawo, has charged the National Agency for Food and Drug Administration and Control (NAFDAC) to step up regulation of food and beverages in the country to safeguard the health of Nigerians.

    Onimawo, a professor of biochemistry, made the charge during a news conference in Ekpoma, Esan West Local Government Area of Edo, on Tuesday.

    He said that the food industry, including restaurants and fast food operators, were left to operate without strict regulations, giving them room to cut corners.

    According to him, NAFDAC, the agency saddled with the responsibility of ensuring food safety in Nigeria, was too occupied with the regulation of drugs, thereby neglecting the food aspect.

    He advised the agency to also lay emphasis on regulation of food to minimise health problems arising from consumption of unsafe food and beverages.

    “NAFDAC is supposed to regulate food and drugs, but their attention is mostly directed at drugs.

    “The food aspect has not been really emphasised that is why you have a lot of food industries who are cutting corners.

    “So NAFDAC should be made to concentrate also on the regulation of food. Whether fast food, restaurants or others,” the don said.

    The vice chancellor implored the regulatory body to work in collaboration with Nutrition Association of Nigeria or Nigeria Institute of Science and Technology to ensure food consumed by Nigerians are safe.

    “NAFDAC should also work in collaboration with Nutritional Association of Nigeria or Nigeria Institute of Science and Technology to checkmate the excesses of manufacturers of food and beverages in the country to ensure standards,” he said.

    On the recent panic over the safety of Sprite and Fanta consumption, Onimawo said the Nigerian Bottling Company (NBC) breached no law, adding that Benzoic Acid to preserve such drinks was safe for human consumption.

    He, however, advised addicts to avoid taking them with ascorbic acid, otherwise known as vitamin c, warning that it is dangerous to the body.

  • 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 destroys N1bn worth of fake products

    NAFDAC destroys N1bn worth of fake products

    The National Agency for Food and Drug Administration and Control (NAFDAC), Thursday destroyed fake, substandard and expired drugs estimated at N1 billion at Shagamu Local Government dump site in Ogun State.

    The agency’s Acting Director-General, Mrs. Yetunde Oni said the exercise was to prevent the re-introduction of such products in the market by unscrupulous people.

    Mrs. Oni, represented by the Director, Investigation and Enforcement Kingsley Ejiofor, said some of the products were seized by the agency’s Investigation and Enforcement Directorate in Lagos and its environs while others were handed voluntarily to NAFDAC between December 2014 and last month.

    She described drug counterfeiting as an act of economic sabotage and terrorism against public health.

    Nigerians, she said, should be watchful of drugs, food and other regulated product they buy, especially as they go into the Easter season.

    Beside this, they should also report any suspicious activities within their environment to the agency.

    She praised the agency for ensuring that a counterfeiter was sentenced to seven year jail term without an option of fine.

    “We commend the judiciary for its support in the protection of public health,” Mrs Oni said.