The National Agency for Food, Drug Administration and Control (NAFDAC) reported that in 2018, tramadol and a container load of unregistered pharmaceutical products were discovered at Lagos’ Apapa Port.
Prof Mojisola Adeyeye, the agency’s Director-General, stated this on Monday in Abuja at a media briefing to highlight the agency’s achievements in the field of food and drug administration.
She stated that the interception was in response to a Presidency intelligence report that some unscrupulous importers were planning to ship down 31 loaded containers of unregistered pharmaceutical products from India to Nigeria.
“Upon the intelligence we directed the ports inspection directorate to begin surveillance and monitoring from the point of loading to where they are trans-loaded along the sea routes, ” she said.
She said that NAFDAC went into collaboration with the Nigeria Customs Service and that eventually paid off as 21 containers were finally discharged at the Apapa port in Lagos.
Adeyeye disclosed that all the containers were labelled to contain building materials, but that during inspection of the content there-in, only two of the containers were found to have building materials.
“As the importers of the containers became aware that NAFDAC was tracking and monitoring the containers on arrival, they decided to change their strategy by diverting the remaining from the Nigerian port.
“Four of the 31 containers never got into Nigeria, but were discharged at trans shipment in Malaysia, one of the containers was transferred to Cotonou port in the Republic of Benin, ” she said.
According to Adeyeye, four of the containers were diverted to the Tema Port in Ghana, but were later brought back to Cotonou, having met resistance from Ghana Food and Drug Agency upon NAFDAC information to the agency.
She disclosed that NAFDAC liaised with Nigeria Ambassador to Republic of Benin and ensured that five of the containers that came to the country’s port were seized on the request of NAFDAC.
The NAFDAC boss said the agency also got judgment that these containers can be destroyed in Republic of Benin.
According to her, at last, the government of Republic of Benin eventually agreed to engage with their Nigerian counterpart to carry out the destruction of the containers in Cotonou.
She said that the unregistered pharmaceutical products along with tramadol of different milligrams in large cartons, were destroyed in Dec. 2022, and that the products were worth N95 billion. (NAN)