Category: General News

  • NAFDAC Cautions Farmers as it Nabs suspect producing fake agro-chemicals in Minna

     

    By Obinna Unaeze

    Minna:  The National Agency for Food and Drug Administration and Control (NAFDAC) in Niger, says it has arrested a suspect, Kabiru Idris, who produces adulterated agro-chemicals in the state.

    Mr James Kigbu, the state Coordinator, NAFDAC, disclosed this on Saturday when the suspect was brought to the agency’s office in Minna with some of the adulterated products.

    “Recently we embarked on surveillance on agro-chemicals within Niger state and arrested one Alhaji Kabiru Idris in Makira, Mashegu Local Government Area, where he produces fake agro-chemicals.

    “Our investigations so far reveal that he is the producer and distributor of agro-chemical known as Dudual 45 per cent used for pest control,” he said.

    Kigbu said that Idris has confessed to the crime and is helping the agency in its investigation into the illicit trade.

    He explained that after investigations, the suspect would be charged to Court and made to pay the necessary fines with written undertaking from the court not to engage in such unwholesome activity again.

    The NAFDAC Coordinator said that before the arrest of Idris, the agency noticed that hawkers with no fixed addresses were selling many agro-chemicals to unsuspecting farmers in the state, especially in the rural areas.

    He said that when the agency arrested some of the hawkers, they revealed that many of them came from Kano state to engage in the unwholesome trade.

    Kigbu said that it was discovered that the agro-chemicals they were selling were fake and expired.

    “The hawkers told us that after each farming season they stored the chemicals and continue with them again in the next farming season,” he said.

    The NAFDAC Coordinator said that many of the hawkers do other jobs but turn to selling fake agro-chemicals because it is lucrative.

    “Some of the hawkers are shoe shiners and water vendors,” he said.

    He cautioned farmers in the rural areas to always purchase their agro-chemicals from a government approved retail outlet to avoid damaging their crops with adulterated agro-chemicals.

    Kigbu noted that the persons who engage in the unwholesome practices use the empty containers of the original products to adulterate the agro-chemicals to defraud unsuspecting farmers.

    Idris, 42, who hails from Mashegu area of the state, told NAN that he had been in the business for nine years now. (NAN) (www.nannews.ng) / Flowerbudnews

  • Buhari reappoints Adeyeye as NAFDAC D-G

    Buhari reappoints Adeyeye as NAFDAC D-G

     

    President Muhammadu Buhari (GCFR) has reappointed the Director-General of National Agency for Food and Drug Administration and Control (NAFDAC), Prof. Moji Adeyeye.
    A statement issued to the News Agency of Nigeria (NAN) by NAFDAC Director of Public Affairs, Dr Abubakar Jimoh, on Friday in Abuja stated that Adeyeye re-appointment was for a second tenure of five years.
    Jimoh said  that the re-appointment by the president was conveyed by the Secretary to the Government of the Federation, Mr Boss Mustapha.
    He said: “Adeyeye’s tenure renewal took effect from 1st December, 2022.
    “The DG’s reappointment came closely on the heels of her track record of monumental achievements and successes in the last five years especially in the attainment of World Health Organisation (WHO) Maturity Level 3.”
    Abubakar said that Adeyeye who assumed duty on Friday was received by some staffers at the corporate headquarters of the agency in Abuja.
    NAN
  • NAFDAC approves first alternative herbal supplements to vaccine, antibiotics for Poultry

    NAFDAC approves first alternative herbal supplements to vaccine, antibiotics for Poultry

    National Drug Administration and Food Control, NAFDAC has approved the first indigenous Alternative Herbal Supplements to vaccine, Antibiotics for Poultry in Nigeria.

    Earlier, the Herbal Supplements has provided succour to 1, 468 farms centers in Nigeria who were faced with threat from varous diseases affecting their birds on the farm .

    The Co – Founder and Managing Director of Ehibaghe Organic System, the manufacturer of the herbal product, Mr. Adedeji Babatunde, who said this in a statement in Calabar, stated said the management of the company is grateful to NAFDAC for recognising the product as herbal supplements that will serve as alternative to vaccines for poultry in Nigeria.

    He said the herbal supplements fight bacteria, fungi and viral infection and improve microbes that help plays crucial role in Poultry birds productivity and health .

    Adedeji further explained that over the years , the health of birds  and productive status of farms that patronize the supplements has drasrically improved and the death rate due to sickness reduced.

    1. The managing director assured that the company intend to expand its product to enable it cater more for many farms in Nigeria in few months time after it is officially launched
  • NAFDAC warns against use of unapproved cosmetics

    NAFDAC warns against use of unapproved cosmetics

    By Isaiah Eka/Nathan Nwakamma

    The National Agency for Food and Drug Administration and Control (NAFDAC) has warned Nigerians not to use unapproved cosmetics because the dangers were largely irreversible.

    The Director-General NAFDAC, Prof. Mojisola Adeyeye, gave the warning during the media sensitisation workshop on dangers of bleaching creams and regulatory controls for South South Journalists in Port Harcourt on Tuesday.

    Adeyeye, who was represented by Dr. Leonard Omokpariola,  Director, Drug Evaluation and Research, said the menace of unapproved cosmetics such as bleaching creams in Nigeria had become a national health emergency that required multi-faced regulatory approach.

    According to the NAFDAC D-G, the unapproved cosmetics used banned and toxic chemicals to achieve skin lightening effects that leaves the user with undesirable effects.

    She listed some of the harmful effects of bleaching creams to include cancer, damage to vital organs of the body like kidney and liver.

    It also causes skin cancer, irritation and allergy, skin burn and rashes, wrinkles, premature skin ageing and prolonged healing of wounds.

    The DG said that  the World Health Organisation in a 2018 study, revealed that use of skin bleaching creams was prevalent among 77 per cent of Nigerian women which was highest in Africa, compared to 59 per cent in Togo, 35 per cent in South Africa and 27 per cent women in Senegal.

    She said that the essence of the sensitisation workshop was to train Journalists and stakeholders, who will inform the public on the dangers of those cosmetics.

    Adeyeye added that the sensitisation workshop was a Train the Trainers’ programme with the great expectation that participants would assume role of champions in the campaign against use of bleaching creams in the country.

    She added that after the sensitisation campaign, the agency would take stringent regulatory actions to stem the dangerous tide of rampant and pervasive cases of Nigerians using bleaching creams.

    The director general thanked journalists and stakeholders for their collaboration and support for NAFDAC to rid the country of the menace of substandard and falsified medicines, unwholesome foods, corrosive cosmetics and other substandard regulated products.

    Representatives of Pharmaceutical Society of Nigeria, cosmetics manufacturers, supermarket operators, Nigerian Customs Health officials, amongst other stakeholders attended the workshop.

    Earlier, Dr Abubakar Jimoh, NAFDAC Director of Public Affairs, said the war against menace of bleaching cream across the country was sequel to a resolution of the 2022 Senate, promoted by Sen Oluremi Tinubu.

    According to Jimoh, the Senate resolution crystallised to a memorandum from the  Secretary to Government of the Federation directing NAFDAC to strengthen its regulatory functions to curb the menace.

    NAN

  • NAFDAC raids hawkers’ outlets, seizes products worth over N2m

    NAFDAC raids hawkers’ outlets, seizes products worth over N2m

    By Moses Omorogieva

    Lagos: The National Agency for Food and Drug Administration and Control (NAFDAC) says it seized products worth more than N2 million at hawkers’ and illegal drug sellers’ outlets in some parts of Lagos State.

    The News Agency of Nigeria (NAN) reports that Mr Afolabi Aderemi, Deputy Director, Pharmaceutical Enforcement Directorate of NAFDAC, Lagos State, made the disclosure on Friday to the News Agency of Nigeria (NAN).

    Aderemi said that the seizures were made during operations by NAFDAC personnel on Thursday evening at Mile 2, Ajegunle and Apapa areas of Lagos State.

    He said that although there were no arrests, the agency was satisfied at the seizures since its main concern was to ensure that illegal and fake products were out of circulation.

    According to Aderemi, the hawkers, who are always at alert of NAFDAC’s constant raids, escaped, leaving their wares behind.

    He said that the raid was continuous.

    “We have counselled members of the public to stop patronising hawkers in buying drugs, as what they are selling are not NAFDAC-approved,’’ he said.

    The official said that a number of such hawkers had been arrested and profiled.

    “ We want to know those behind them.

    “We noticed that anytime we go out for raids, for about two weeks or more, the hawkers will not be found in such areas, but after sometime, they will reappear.

    “We want to block their products from members of the public. If there is no supply, there would be no demand.

    “Members of the public should go to registered pharmaceutical stores for drugs,” he advised.

    NAN

  • NAFDAC arrests manufacturer of unregistered herbal medicine in Ibadan

     

    NAFDAC arrests manufacturer of unregistered herbal medicine in Ibadan

    By Olatunde Ajayi

    National Agency for Food and Drug Administration and Control (NAFDAC), on Friday, arrested the manufacturer of an unregistered herbal medicine in Ibadan.

    Director, South-West zone of NAFDAC, Mrs Roseline Ajayi, disclosed this while conducting newsmen round the premises of the factory, Oladem Company Limited, in Ibadan.

    Ajayi said that the manufacturer could not produce any evidence of registration of the product, christened: At-Taqwah Multipurpose Herbal Medicine, with NAFDAC before embarking on mass production.

    She said that following a tip-off, the agency swung into action immediately by sending surveillance officers to the location, which led to the arrest of the suspect.

    Ajayi said that the agency had placed the production of the herbal product on hold and sealed the premises due to its unhealthy state.

    “We have to follow the due process for registration of any of NAFDAC-regulated product of which herbal products happened to be one.

    “We have three stages to get a product registered with NAFDAC, which include documentation with payment, inspection and laboratory analysis.

    “Also, a sample of the product will be drawn to a laboratory to ascertain its chemical and microbiology components, if it meets specification before approval,” she said.

    Ajayi said that the suspect had yet to apply to NAFDAC for necessary administrative procedures before embarking on mass production of the drug.

    “He has not even applied because he knows that no inspection officer will certify a product produced in that kind of a premises.

    “The sanitary condition of the premises is poor and the premises is not satisfactory for production of anything for human consumption,” she said.

    The NAFDAC director stated that the agency had different penalties for different categories of violators.

    According to her, the suspect’s offence is criminal and he will be handed over to the enforcement directorate of the agency.

    She advised Nigerians to be careful about the herbal medicine they consumed, especially those with multi-purpose healing claims.

    The suspect, while answering questions from newsmen, claimed that the herbal product was multi-purpose and that that worked for fever, malaria, body pain and hypertension.

    Ajao said that he had started the production and distribution of the product to different parts of the country since the past five years.

    According to him, the product is made from tobacco leaves and other local materials.

    The suspect, who said that he had not gone for any training on herbal medicine production, added that he inherited the production process from his parents. (NAN) (www.nannews.ng)

  • NAFDAC Initiates Strategy to End Rejection of Nigerian Food Exports to Europe and US

    NAFDAC Initiates Strategy to End Rejection of Nigerian Food Exports to Europe and US

    Flowerbudnews

     

    By Biola Lawal
    Abuja (Flowerbudnews): The National Agency for Food and Drug Administration and Control (NAFDAC) has called for synergy among relevant government agencies at the ports to ensure that only quality food products were exported from the country to Europe and America.

    The Director General, NAFDAC, Prof Mojisola Adeyeye, made the call at the official commissioning of the New NAFDAC Office complex for the Murtala Muhammed International Airport/NAHCO, Lagos.

    Prof Adeyeye stressed that strengthening of collaboration between NAFDAC, Customs , DSS and others would curb the incidences of rejection of food exports from Nigeria in some European countries and the United States of America.

    The NAFDAC Boss lamented that over 70 per cent of food exports from Nigeria are rejected abroad with huge financial losses to the exporters and the country at large.

    A statement by the Resident Media Consultant to NAFDAC, Sayo Akintola, on Sunday, quoted the DG as saying that the deplorable state of export trade facilitation for regulated products leaving the country has continued to be a serious cause for concern for her Agency.

    Prof Adeyeye said that a visit to NAFDAC Export warehouses within the international airport will explain unequivocally the major reason for the continuous rejection of Nigerian exports abroad.

    She, however, noted that the Agency is responding to this great challenge by initiating a collaborative adventure with the government agencies at the Ports towards ensuring that goods are of requisite quality and meet the regulatory requirements of the importing countries and destinations before such are even packaged and hauled to the ports for shipment.

    According to her, this raises the need for a more enhanced regulation of export – packaging, pre-shipment testing and certification to provide some quality assurance and to minimize rejects.

    To save our national reputation in the international commerce, Prof Adeyeye called on all stakeholders in the export trade to see this as a call to duty and collaborate with NAFDAC for the sake of country and our collective future.

    ‘’The mandate to safeguard the health of the populace through ensuring that food, medicines, cosmetics, medical devices, chemicals, and packaged water are safe, efficacious and of the right quality in an economy that is overwhelmingly dependent on importation of the bulk of its finished products and raw materials could never have been actualized without effective presence of NAFDAC at the ports and land borders’’, she said.

    She recalled that this informed ‘’our push through the resilience of the past Director, Prof Samson Adebayo on assumption of duties, for the immediate return of NAFDAC to the ports that eventually happened in May 2018’’, stressing that ‘’with gratitude for the approval of the President and the various arms of the Government, the results of our presence at the ports are available for everyone to see’’.

    She, however, commended the Nigeria Customs Service for the symbiotic relationship that exists between its management and the Agency, saying ‘’without customs, we will not be able to do a lot of what we have been able to do. The collaboration between Customs and NAFDAC is huge.

    NAFDAC is a complex organization. We are scientific. We are police and we work with DSS. We work with Interpol and FBI because of the few stakeholders that are unscrupulous.

    NAFDAC collaborates with Nigeria Agricultural Quarantine Services, to ensure that due diligence is done because over 70 per cent of the products that leave our ports get rejected.

    Considering the money spent on getting those products out of the country, it is a double loss for both the exporter and the country)’’.

    ‘’Without the police we cannot do much in terms of investigation and enforcement. We have over 80 policemen with us in NAFDAC. They help us a lot when we are doing raids or investigations as the case may be’’.

    In pursuit of its mandate, she further explained that the Agency has embarked on the optimization and customization of its processes, stating that the Ports Inspection Data-Capture and Risk Management System (PIDCARMS) is presently deployed in all of the nation’s ports and land borders to automatically capture and process data for imported regulated products from the Nigeria Customs Information System (NICIS).

    The DG said the Agency is also working assiduously with relevant stakeholders towards implementation of Traceability for pharmaceuticals in Nigeria.

    She recalled that a Traceability Pilot was conducted successfully for COVID-19 Vaccines distribution and a scale-up is being done as soon as feasible, for medicines and other regulated products.

    ‘’The Traceability Information System was developed from PIDCARMS, which underscores the integrative system of NAFDAC. These efforts will further boost our regulatory oversight in monitoring the importation and distribution of medicines to ensure that spurious, substandard, and falsified (fake and counterfeit) products are minimized and are eventually blocked out from our supply chain’’.

    ‘’Similarly, our Post-marketing Surveillance initiatives that involve the Ports Inspection Directorate are gaining global recognition, and we intend to do much more for our nation, especially for future generations’’, she said.

    She stated that the Agency has extended the frontiers of the fight against substandard products through the procurement of more Truscan devices to further boost on-spot checks for quality of products at the ports, shops, market spaces and anywhere else.

    According to Prof. Adeyeye, NAFDAC as a customer-focused and Agency minded organization under her leadership has ‘’steadily engaged in improving service delivery in the course of carrying out its mandate as enshrined in the NAFDAC Act Cap N1 Laws of the Federation of Nigeria (LFN) 2004.

    The act empowered NAFDAC to among others, regulate and control the manufacture, importation, exportation, distribution, advertisement, sale and use of food, drugs, cosmetics, chemicals, medical devices and packaged water (known as regulated products)’’.

    She said these efforts have paid off as NAFDAC has recently been recognized as a world class regulator, with the conferment of the WHO ML3 Status and with continuous improvement of our processes and procedures progressing towards becoming a WHO Listed regulatory Authority (WLA) status to the satisfaction of our customers.

    In a bid to deliver on its mandate in spite of the various challenges, she said ‘’we have spent the last few years of my first tenure in the onerous task of building new and upgrading obsolete infrastructure to make them befit to our status, and to provide a safe and comfortable working environment for our staff for maximum output’’.

    The NAHCO Office Complex, according to Prof. Adeyeye, is one of the two facilities commissioned same day as part of her efforts to position the Agency as a global regulator that is fully equipped to undertake its regulatory oversight in compliance with Global best practices.

    She had earlier in the day commissioned the Ogun State NAFDAC office complex in Abeokuta with pomp and ceremony. Seven NAFDAC state office complexes have been completed by the DG across the country in the last five years while many others are at different stages of completion.

    The NAHCO Complex presently houses fully equipped and befitting Office Spaces for staff, some of whom run a 24-hour surveillance service, a Press/Conference room that can sit forty persons, a temporary mini-warehouse equipped with temperature-sensitive storage facility, as well as light-duty vehicular equipment for safely moving items till such are ready for release or seizure for destruction.

    ‘’My heart broke one day in early 2018 when our former director of Port Inspection Directorate sent me a picture of our staff at the Apapa port working from inside their car with a big umbrella because it was raining so that clients can come in and take care of their business.

    ”I was shocked’’, she said in a voice laden with grief, stressing that ‘’with this monumental edifice with maximum comfort and tools, all that has become a thing of the past for our staff’’. (Flowerbudnews)

  • Headline: NAFDAC DG Vows to continue to prioritise safety of Nigerians

    Headline: NAFDAC DG Vows to continue to prioritise safety of Nigerians

    Flowerbudnews

     

    Abuja: The National Agency for Food and Drug Administration and Control (NAFDAC) has reiterated its commitment to ensuring that Nigerians consume wholesome and safe products.

     

    Prof. Mojisola Adeyeye, NAFDAC Director-General, disclosed this in an interview with the News Agency of Nigeria (NAN) on Wednesday in

    Abuja.

    She said that the agency has introduced various technological initiatives toward ensuring a better deal for the citizens.

     

    “The agency uses TrueScan, which is a hand-held device used for on-the-spot detection of counterfeit medicines.

     

    “The device allows regulators and law enforcement agents to conduct field-based screening of pharmaceutical samples to quickly and accurately identify counterfeits,” Adeyeye said.

     

    The NAFDAC boss said that there was the need for Nigerians to appreciate the efforts of the agency towards improving on food and drug safety.

     

    ‘’Following my appointment as the Director- General, I was informed of the need to have a Strategic Plan that will reflect my vision and the Federal Ministry of Health’s 2nd National Strategic Health Development Plan.

     

    ‘’Thus, the plan development process involved identification of new areas of focus and the realignment of our priorities in line with the present Management’s direction and the FMoH Strategic Plan in order to make us work smarter in the same direction and deliver on our mandate,’’ she said.

     

    Adeyeye said that the agency has taken measures for the tracing and distribution of drugs in the country through a global system that allows screening of barcode and post market surveillance (PMS) of products.

     

    NAN reports that PMS refers to the process of monitoring the safety of drugs once they reach the market after the successful completion of clinical trials.

     

    The primary purpose for the conduct of PMS is to identify previously unrecognized adverse effects as well as positive effects.

     

    Adeyeye said that farmers were also being sensitised on the use of appropriate quantities of pesticide on their products and likewise livestock farmers on antibiotics use.

     

    She said that the effect of inappropriate use of both pesticide and antibiotics were serious on the health of consumers and the overall status of heath of citizens.

     

    The NAFDAC boss added that such uncontrolled use of antibiotics was the cause of  outbreaks of drug  resistant diseases.

     

    “Arbitrary use of antibiotics in animals may raise the risk of transmitting drug-resistant bacteria to humans either by direct infection or by transferring “resistance genes from agriculture into human pathogens,” she said.

     

    Adeyeye said that the agency was also working assiduously on ensuring quality drugs are made available through its post-market monitoring.

     

    She said that stakeholders in the food and pharmaceutical industries  had responded positively to its efforts at sanitising the industry.

  • NAFDAC seals shop in Zuba, Abuja, for allegedly selling unregistered aphrodisiacs

    NAFDAC seals shop in Zuba, Abuja, for allegedly selling unregistered aphrodisiacs

    Flowerbudnews

    By Franca Ofili
    Abuja:   The National Agency for Food and Drug Administration and Control (NAFDAC) has sealed a shop in Zuba, an outskirt of FCT, for allegedly selling unapproved aphrodisiacs to Nigerians.

    The News Agency of Nigeria (NAN) reports that some of the aphrodisiacs are: garin yansun, sabon mai-siket, ruwan jaraba, tunkude,
    fenugreek powder and al-khausara herbal syrup (man power).

    Mr Bubuchiki Godiya, a member of the Federal Taskforce, Investigation and Enforcement Directorate of NAFDAC, said that “the agency
    received an Intel that Yunusa Adamu was manufacturing unregistered herbal preparation.”

    Godiya said that the agency sent some of its team members to investigate and on arrival they found that there were many unregistered herbal drugs.

    He said that Adamu claimed to have purchased the herbal drugs from Kano and Kaduna markets.

    According to him, even though Adamu gave the invoice of some of the products to the team, he still denied producing any drugs.

    “We will investigate for more evidence; the shop has more than 15 different varieties of products.

    “Many of them have pornographic pictures which are not acceptable and the agency cannot register a drug or any product with pornographic pictures.

    “The drugs are all over the shop that is why we have evacuated as much as we can and we are still going to seal the place until we conclude our investigation.

    “We will go with the suspect in order to record his statement and investigate more to know our next line of action,’’ Godiya said.

    He said that the agency’s standard of procedure would be to investigate the suspect.

    Godiya said that samples would be taken to the laboratory for analysis and with the result; the agency would know the way forward.

    On his part, Adamu told NAN that he bought the drugs from Kano and Kaduna markets, and that he had been in business for a very long time,
    saying that “it is what people know me for.”

    He said that his chairman, who was not available, would bring the necessary documents to the agency. (NAN)(www.nannews.ng) /Flowerbudnews