With clothes on lines in the balconies of some flats in the four-storey
building located in the densely-populated area of Kirikiri Town, Lagos,
no one would have suspected that the eight flats are not occupied by
human beings, but are warehouses for expired products, which are
repackaged as new.
The discovery by officials of the Standard Organisation of Nigeria, SON,
weekend, after a tip-off by members of the public, was shocking as all
sorts of cosmetics and household consumables were found in the flats,
which had expired many years ago.
Conducting journalists round the building yesterday, SON Director of
Monitoring & Compliance, Engr. Bede Obayi, said: “We acted on the
intelligence we received from well-meaning Nigerians. You can see the
volume of expired products here and imagine the implication for our
society in terms of health issues.
“When somebody buys expired cream, what does it show? You are applying
cream that the active ingredient has gone and that may cause reactions
on the skin.
“More importantly, you are dealing with products
that children use. Look at baby diapers that expired in 2015. Imagine
what a product that expired in 2015 will do to a baby if used in 2017.”
Obayi confirmed that most of the products are popular brands imported
into the country, adding “perhaps they went overseas to buy these
products that are close to their expiry dates and shipped them down
here, because they have ready markets where people can buy.
“This four-storey building of eight flats with the toilets, bathrooms
and all available spaces filled with expired products. That tells you
the enormity of the crime this person is committing.
“Look at this wrapper for disinfectant. What they do is to pick the
expired ones and use this wrapper with new expiry dates to wrap it. When
you have the old products inside this wrap that carries 2018 as expiry
date, you will not know you are buying cloned products. The products
have lost their active ingredients and efficacy.”
Importer’s alibi
On the claim by the importer that he was waiting to destroy the
products, Obayi said he should have removed the expired ones and
contacted the relevant agencies of government to destroy the products in
line with international best practices.
According to him, “but what we have seen here is a dubious warehouse or
hideout where people are churning out expired products for the markets.”
Obayi said most of the products would have entered the markets as the importer supplies major supermarkets in the state.
He added that SON is going to seal up the whole building to carry out
further investigations and use the process to recall those already sold
out.
He said: “We have our offices throughout the nation and are going to
escalate the recall process immediately, where we will get all the
details of their transaction, so that anywhere these products are, we
will pick them with the cost to the importer.
“SON cannot accept this and those who are out to kill Nigerians. We will
not allow them to be selling things like this, killing people in the
name of merchandising.
“We don’t want to continue to see people with illnesses caused by people
who are out to kill by changing expiry dates.” He promised that at the
end of investigation the importer will be persecuted by SON.
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