Tag: National Agency for Food and Drugs Administration and Control (NAFDAC)

  • NAFDAC, BOI, partners Katsina corps members on self-employment

    THE Katsina State branch of the National Agency for Food and Drugs Administration and Control (NAFDAC) on Saturday in Katsina, announced its readiness to assist NYSC corps members posted to the state, to secure loan facilities  that will enable them engage in meaningful entrepreneurship after their passing out.

    The state representative of the agency, Alhaji Abubakar Musa, who made the declaration while on a visit to the 2019 Batch B stream II Corps Members, deployed to Katsina State also sensitised them on how to access the loans and create wealth through entrepreneurship that guarantees self-employment.

    Read Also: NAFDAC: Eva water safe for drinking

    He further counseled them on the need to get their businesses registered and stem the growing youth unemployment in the country.

    The NAFDAC boss also highlighted the importance of food preservation and food businesses which according to him will go a long way to protect the wellbeing of mankind.

    He said “please feel free to expose anyone found doing food or drug business using fake NAFDAC number in any community they may find themselves in Katsina”.

    In a related development, the Bank of Industry (BOI) has also sensitised corps members on how to access loans to promote their businesses.

     

     

  • NAFDAC arraigns businessman for importation of fake drugs

    NAFDAC arraigns businessman for importation of fake drugs

    The National Agency for Food and Drugs Administration and Control ( NAFDAC ), on Wednesday, charged a businessman, Ezeanwu Ifeanyi, before a Federal High Court Lagos, over alleged importation of fake drugs.

    The accused was arraigned on a one count charge of dealing in fake drugs.

    In the charge, the NAFDAC alleged that the accused was found in possession of a one by 40 feet container which harboured some restricted drugs including: Tramadol Hydrochloric tablets, Royal Tramadol, Ibamol tablets, Heogra tablets, and Diarrhea capsule.

    He, however, pleaded not guilty to the charge.

    After his plea was taken, the prosecutor, Mr Umar Shamaki, sought for an adjournment, and urged the court to remand the accused in prison custody, pending trial.

    However, the accused counsel, Mr Chinwobi Adiele, urged the court to order the prosecution to oblige him with the proof of evidence to enable him defend the accused.

    Adiele, further told the court that the bail application of the accused was before the court, and service had been effected.

    Responding, Shamaki informed the court that he was served the application in court today and that he needed time to respond to the application.

    Consequently, Justice Hadiza Rabiu-Shagari, adjourned the matter until March 16 for hearing and ruling on the bail application.

    Rabiu-Shagari ordered that the accused be remanded in prison custody.

    The offence contravenes the provisions of section 1(a) of the Counterfeit and Fake Drugs and Unwholesome Processed Foods (Miscellaneous Provision) Act Cap. C34 Laws of the Federation, 2004

    Section 3(1)[a] prescribes a fine not exceeding N500,000 or imprisonment for a term of not less than five years, or more than fifteen years for the offence of importation of fake drugs.

    NAN

  • NAFDAC moves to ease registration of products for MSMEs

    NAFDAC moves to ease registration of products for MSMEs

    The National Agency for Food and Drugs Administration and Control ( NAFDAC ) has concluded arrangements to ease registration of products for Micro, Small and Medium Enterprises ( MSMEs ) in the country.

    Mr Ademola Mogbojuri, its Acting Director-General made this known in Minna on Monday during a stakeholders consultative forum for Small and Medium Scale Enterprises (SMSEs).

    “NAFDAC is to streamline the registration process to make it easier for MSMEs to register their products with the agency without compromising on quality and safety.

    “I wish to reiterate that NAFDAC is fully committed to the development of MSMEs in Nigeria because a number of efforts have been made and are being sustained,’’ he said.

    Mogbojuri, who was represented by Dr Abubakar Jimoh, NAFDAC Director Special Duties, said that there was need to comply with the Federal Government’s directive to ease establishment of small businesses in the country.

    “It was perceived that a number of the agency’s regulatory processes are stalling the ease of doing business hence the need for more efforts toward addressing the issue.

    “Therefore, I have approved the composition of an in-house committee to harmonise all these processes and drive the implementation of the presidential directive within a specified timeline,’’ he said.

    He called on affected stakeholders to accord the committee the necessary support to enable the agency restructure its operations toward easing the establishment and operation of MSMEs in the country.

    The Acting NAFDAC Boss said that on May 21 Vice President Yemi Osinbajo issued the Presidential Executive Directive on ease of doing business in Nigeria.

    He explained that the directive was premised on transparency, in ministries, Departments and Agency of Government, default approvals, one government directive, entry experience of visitors and travellers and ports operations.

    Earlier, Mr Anikoh Ibrahim, Niger Coordinator of NAFDAC, said that under the Federal Government’s directive 50 per cent discount from the original tariff for registration of products would be applied to companies with staff strength of five and below.

    Ibrahim said that under the arrangement the entire process of attaining NAFDAC registration license would not exceed 90 days.

    He said that the measure would ensure that registration process for bakery license would not exceed 30 days, adding that before now these processes of registration would take a year or more.

    The State Coordinator of the agency said that regulated products under the category include food, drugs, cosmetics, herbal medicines and packed water.

    Also, Malam Abdulwaheed Abdulkadir, chairman Association of Table Water Producers in the state appealed to the agency to ensure that the 30 day new policy for renewal of licenses for existing businesses was extended to newly established businesses.

    Abdulkadir said that such gesture would encourage establishment of new MSMEs across the country and in turn boost the economy.

    NAN

  • NAFDAC union to continue strike until new DG apointment

    NAFDAC union to continue strike until new DG apointment

    The National Agency for Food and Drugs Administration and Control (NAFDAC) workers says it will continue to down tool until the Federal Government appoints a substantive Director General.

    Mr Ejor Michael, the National Public Relations Officer (PRO), Medical and Health Union of Nigeria, NAFDAC chapter made this known on Saturday in Abuja in an interview with the News Agency of Nigeria (NAN).

    The union on Sept. 22 embarked on an indefinite strike to demand for a new DG or the appointment of the most senior director to run the affairs of the agency.

    Michael said that the Acting DG, Mrs Yetunde Oni had been on acting capacity since February 2016 and had acted for over one year.

    “She clocks 60 years on Thursday and by virtue of public service rule she has to go, but she doesn’t want to go.

    “We therefore, ask the Federal Government to give us a substantive DG or the most senior director in NAFDAC take over same way Oni took over as the most senior in 2016,” he said.

    The union alleged that the acting director had handed over to a director who is not the most senior.

    Mr Idu Isua, Vice Chairman of the union said that the next senior director was supposed to take charge after Oni had attained the mandatory age of 60 years.

    He said that the next in line to the Acting DG should automatically take charge before the appointment of a substantive DG by the Federal Government.

    In a swift reaction, Mr Jimoh Abubakar, Director of Public Relations and Special Duties, NAFDAC said that the appointment of the DG was an exclusive preserved of the President.

    He said that the controversy surrounding the appointment of an acting DG was needless, adding that the Federal Government was aware of the situation and would take appropriate step at the right time.

    “Government in its wisdom will take appropriate decision, we should not be in a hurry, government is aware of information we are not privy to.”

    He said that the problems with most Nigerian were that they always want to interpret the government.

    NAN reports that there had been squabbles on the running of NAFDAC between the former acting DG, Oni and the most senior director.

    NAN recalled that Oni handed over to a director that is junior to the next in line, but the union said the anomaly must be corrected to avoid bastardising the public service rule.

  • Army inaugurates one million litre water treatment plant in Enugu

    Army inaugurates one million litre water treatment plant in Enugu

    The Nigerian Army has inaugurated a water treatment plant at Abakpa Cantonment in Enugu, capable of treating and supplying one million litres of water daily to the barracks and its environs.

    Abakpa cantonment is the headquarters of the 82 Division of the Nigerian Army.

    The Chief of Army Staff, Lt.-Gen. Tukur Buratai, who inaugurated the project on Wednesday, said the plant would solve the over 30-year-old perennial water problem in the barracks and its environs.

    Buratai said that the project was the first water treatment plant constructed solely by Nigerian Army Engineers.

    He said the Enugu State Government provided the transformer to power the plant and additional funds for its construction.

    Buratai also said that the state government had promised to construct the road leading to the treatment plant from the cantonment gate.

    The plant sources water from Miri Ocha River, flowing behind the cantonment.

    The General Officer Commanding (GOC) 82 Division, Maj.-Gen. Adamu Abubakar, who conceived and executed the project, said it was executed through direct labour by 44 Army Engineers.

    Abubakar said the plant used rapid filtration system, adding that water from the plant had already been certified fit for consumption by the National Agency for Food and Drugs Administration and Control (NAFDAC).

    Gov. Ifeanyi Ugwuanyi said the state government would collaborate with the army to replicate the technology to upgrade the water supply scheme in the state.

  • Rejected abroad, ‘kings’ at home

    Rejected abroad, ‘kings’ at home

    • How Nigerians consume contaminated food rejected in European countries

    CAUTION ALERT. That was the mood triggered when the European Union banned several food items originating from Nigeria last year.  Prior to the ban, cases of food poisoning leading to loss of lives were often reported. Last year, a family of six reportedly died after eating contaminated beans cake.

    In 2015 and 2016, the European Union rejected 67 processed and semi-processed foods from Nigeria, citing poor quality, contamination and high levels of chemicals in the preserved products. Food items such as beans, melon seeds, palm oil, bitter leaf, pumpkin, shelled groundnuts and live snails topped the list. The pesticide level of banned beans from Nigeria was said to be between 30.03mg per kg to 4.6mg per kg of Dichlorvos pesticide, while the acceptable residue limit is 0.01mg/kg.

    The chemical contents notwithstanding, Nigerians at home consume these food items with relish. The absence of labeling or inadequate labeling in many cases, render many consumers helpless as they are forced to buy food from the open market without gleaning adequate information on the chemicals used for preservation.

    Findings show that melon, one of the exported food items banned by the European Union, which is a soup delicacy consumed with relished in Nigeria can be compromised by aflatoxins, a toxin produced by certain fungi found on agricultural crops. Contamination of melons has become rampant in recent time as many no longer follow the conventional style of removing melon seeds from its protective shell but rely on ground melon wrapped in cellophane bags purchased in the open market. The melon reacts with the cellophane’s petroleum residue, making it become oxidized over time. This eventually prompts free radicals to be stocked into the melon soup.

    Also, with Nigeria’s haphazard storage system and the long process of transporting food from the farms to ready markets; shelled groundnuts, another exported banned food item consumed in Nigeria, is easily infected with fungi. The fungi react by denaturing the oil.

    Aflatoxin causes infertility, abortions and delayed onset of egg production in birds; a research published by Dr. Oladele Dokun, a veterinary doctor at the Nigeria’s Animal Care Laboratory has shown. Dr. Dokun further said that loss of appetite, skin discoloration or even yellowish pigmentation on the skin can be observed in fish.

    In humans, aflatoxin poisoning, known as aflatoxicosis is said to cause nausea, vomiting, abdominal pain and convulsion. Side effects also include a collection of fluid in the lungs (pulmonary edema), a collection of fluid in the brain (cerebral edema), abnormalities of the blood and blood cancer even in children. Bleeding, liver damage and cancer, kidney and heart damage are also listed.

    Sharing a personal experience, Mr. Femi Kusa, a columnist and fellow of the Nigerian Association of Physicians of Natural Medicine recalled how he once ordered 20 litres of fresh palm kernel oil from a region of the country but was shocked to find a white film over it days later.

    “It was fungi! So, I threw the keg and its contents away and proceeded with the detoxification of my system. This sort of thing can make one ill, and an inexperienced doctor would merely provide drugs to suppress symptoms he observes and not uproot the cause(s).

    “If you shrug your shoulders in disbelief, saying our grandparents ate these things and live to ripe, old age, you may not have looked at the other side of the equation. That other side was their diet! Did they consume sugar the way we do today? Did they eat junk foods? Were they stressed up the way we are? Did they not sleep longer and more restfully than we do? Their bodies were not as weak as ours, and probably didn’t collapse as easily as ours do under aflatoxin bombardment”, Mr. Kusa queried, in a piece titled “Aflatoxins in Nigerian Foods”, published in the Natural Remedies for Sound body and Mind column.

    Prof Kolawole Adebayo, a rural development expert, believes the influx of contaminated food in the country is as a result of activities in the informal food sector which produces most of the food consumed.

    “If you want to buy garri, you don’t look for the National Agency for Food and Drugs Administration and Control (NAFDAC) number because you are going to buy it in the local market. However, if you set up a company who wanted to sell packaged Garri, then you need a NAFDAC number. This same rule applies if you want to export outside of Nigeria”.

    Commenting on the banned Nigerian food items in Europe, Prof Adebayo who is also the Project Director, ‘Cassava: Adding Value for Africa Phase II (CAVA II)’, affirmed that once there is evidence of some unwanted bodies in a food crop, the importing nations are within their rights to reject it.

    “I think the problem the agric export sector faces in this instance is that some of the exporters did not get the required certificate, not because the food in themselves were bad. This is a problem of the government per say in terms of how it implement its own programmes and policies and what it allows to go in or come out of this country”, he stressed.

    Emphasizing on the need for active inspection of food items in the open market by regulatory government agencies; he also canvassed for the promotion of radio awareness jingles to inform consumers on the need to be discerning. 

    Also, the President, Federation of Agriculture Commodity Association of Nigeria, Dr. Victor Iyama in a chat with The Nation maintained that contamination of food from Nigeria is not as rampant as orchestrated by the European Union.

    Speaking on unsafe food in the informal sector, he averred that contaminated foods imported are compromised by packaging, based on the presence of preservatives and storage.

    “The few contaminations from the farms would be those that use expired or banned chemicals. That is why we are trying to eject bad packaging, especially hydrocarbon free bags. We are also training farmers to adopt organic fertilizers. Though that has its cost as the yields would be limited, but it is better to have safe food than fantastic yield,” he submitted.

    Faced with the reality that some of the food items in the open markets are infected with rodents; he revealed that plans are underway to embark on radio jingles to educate food vendors in order to prevent possible outbreaks of diseases like Lassa fever.

    Early last year, the Minister of Agriculture and Rural Development, Audu Ogbeh raised a warning, saying Nigerians might be killing themselves in installment through the food they eat.  Food items mentioned included moi-moi wrapped with cellophane and sachet water exposed to the sun at 28 degree Celsius. He also added that many of the cows shepherd by herdsmen are already infected with tuberculosis.

    Asked to speak on efforts made at safeguarding food in Nigeria, Dr Abubakar Jimoh, the Director of Special Duties and Communication, National Agency For Food and Drug Administration and Control (NAFDAC), told The Nation that the agency  is  working with farmers to ensure that whatever is produced at home will not be rejected by the international community.

    “We have recently established a veterinary department which works closely with Nigerian farmers and even animals that have contaminated drugs administered to them. We do not want them to get into the body of an average consumer”.

    Dr. Jimoh also stated that the agency has been educating farmers on correct chemical applications for food storage in order to prevent food contamination.

    Advising Nigerians on precaution measures, Prof Ngozi Nnam, a former National President of the Nutrition Society of Nigeria tasked Nigerians to consume fruits and vegetables rich in powerful antioxidants in order to suppress the effect of contaminated food.

    “Nature has a way of taking care of contamination but our problem in Nigeria is that we don’t take enough food rich in antioxidants. Vitamin A and C are good sources derived from fruits and vegetables. Nigerians should consider adding fruits and vegetables to their diets as they help protect the body from the harmful effect of contaminants”, she advised.

    Reporting done with support from CodeforAfrica.

     

  • Customs destroy N1b worth of imported poultry

    Customs destroy N1b worth of imported poultry

    The Nigeria Customs Service, Federal Operations Unit (FOU) Zone C Owerri, covering the Southeast and South-South states, Saturday destroyed impounded frozen poultry products with Duty Paid Value of N1, 275,712,500.

    The 102, 099 cartons of frozen poultry products which were intercepted at various point within the Zone, were said to be illegally imported.

    The Customs Area Controller in charge of FOU Zone ‘C’, Comptroller Mohammed Uba, said the figure was the total of seizures of poultry products made by the Zone since he assumed duty in October 2016, adding that the impounded products have been destroyed in accordance with government policy.

    Mohammed restated that poultry products are still under import prohibition, warning that “any of such found will be seized and destroyed in compliance with the relevant laws and government policies”.

    Given a graphic detail of how one of the seizures was made, the Controller, revealed that “operatives of the FOU Zone ‘C’ Owerri on Thursday 19th April 2017 intercepted 24,032 cartons of imported frozen poultry products with Duty Paid Value of N259, 545,600, conveyed in a Mack Truck with registration number AJL 861 XA along Benin Ekiadolor axis by Lagos Expressway, Edo State. The poultry items include turkey parts, chicken parts, poultry gizzard amongst others”.

    Speaking during the destruction of the seized poultry in Benin, Mohammed, noted that the seizures were achieved through the diligence of his officers and men, who he said have recently been encouraged to put in their best with the recent promotion of Officers and men of the Service by the Comptroller General of Customs, Col Hameed Ali (Rtd).

    He reiterated the commitment of his officers to ensure that smuggling is brought to a minimal level.

    According to him, “as trained officers in the course of our duty when we intercept any suspected goods and confirm it to be brought in contrary to the laws it will be seized and disposed of. We will continue to make sure that the public is adequately informed so that importation will be done in conformity with the laws and we will stem the menace of smuggling”.

    He further advised Nigerians against the importation of frozen poultry products, stressing that, “it adversely affect the nation’s poultry industry and have been adjudged by health authorities to be injurious to health”.

    Mohammed continued that, “we have to encourage farmers and those in the agriculture sector to be productive, self-reliant, provide employment and boost the economy instead of sending out our foreign exchange and encouraging capital flight”.

    He disclosed that three suspects were arrested in connection with the recent seizures made in Benin, adding that they will soon be charged to court, while enjoining smugglers to shun the illicit business and engage in legitimate trade to boost the nation’s economy.

    On hand to witness the destruction of the poultry products were representatives of other security agencies including the Nigerian Police Force, Department of State Security (DSS), National Agency for Food and Drugs Administration and Control (NAFDAC), Nigeria Security and Civil Defence Corps (NSCDC)

     

  • NAFDAC to traders: Don’t store beverages on bare floor

    NAFDAC to traders: Don’t store beverages on bare floor

    The National Agency for Food and Drugs Administration and Control (NAFDAC) on Friday warned traders in Taraba against storing beverages on the bare floor.

    The State Coordinator of the agency, Alhaji Suleiman Folorunsho, gave the warning during a mop-up of imported foreign juices in shops and warehouses in Jalingo.

    According to him, storing beverages on the floor is an illegal act which undermines the integrity of the products.

    He said the poor storage habit was partly responsible for the unusual and offensive smell that consumers perceived in some beverages.

    Folorunsho advised the traders to henceforth store the beverages on pallets or risked being fined by the agency.

    However, at the mop up exercise in a shop at Barde Way, the coordinator approved the sale of some cartons of can Amstel Malt which were earlier suspended by the agency.

    He said both the agency’s headquarters and the Nigerian Bottling Company had confirmed that the product was genuine, allaying the fear of a purported “label variation” on it.

    The News Agency of Nigeria (NAN) reports that three supermarkets, out of the more than 30 shops and warehouses inspected by the agency, were fined for selling foreign fruit juice.

    The agency also confiscated expired and unregistered beverages such as Castle Milk Stout, Cape Discovery, Jacobs Pineapple and Climax Herbal Energy Drink.

    Others included expired Spaghetti, Macaroni and Crusader soap.