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Nigerian Court Jails Trader For Repackaging Paracetamol As Antimalarial Drugs

A Federal High Court in Awka, Anambra State has sentenced a middle-aged man, Ogbodo Friday, to seven years imprisonment without an option of a fine for endangering the lives of innocent consumers through the circulation of fake and counterfeited drugs.

Ogbodo was arrested by the Investigation and Enforcement officers of the National Agency for Food and Drug Administration and Control at his residence located at 18, Abagana street, Fegge, Onitsha, Anambra State.

When the building was ransacked, officials recovered packs of falsified Maldox (Sulfadoxine and Pyrimethamine), a brand of anti-malaria tablet manufactured by a registered Nigerian Pharmaceutical Company from him.

This was contained in a statement issued by NAFDAC Resident Media Consultant, Sayo Akintola, on Wednesday.

Akintola disclosed that operatives of the agency, acting on intelligence, swooped on the convict’s residence in Onitsha.

When apprehended, Ogbodo confessed that he cut Emzor Paracetamol tables and repackaged them as Maldox (Sulfadoxine & Pyrimethamine) and supplied the same to undisclosed dealers in falsified Medical Products at the popular Head Bridge Market in Onitsha.

The convict also claimed that he had been in the business of adulterating and falsifying medicines for more than a year, making huge returns.

Speaking further, the media consultant explained that following the overwhelming evidence, the agency charged him to court in Charge No: FHC/AWK/C/57/2021- between FRN V. OGBODO FRIDAY.

“On 26th January 2022, he was arraigned at the Federal High Awka, Anambra State before Justice H.A. Nganjiwa on a two-count charge bordering on possession of Fake Maldox (Sulfadoxine and Pyrimethamine) and packaging of Emzor paracetamol in a manner that is misleading.

“After Ogbodo Friday pleaded guilty to the offence, the Prosecution reviewed the facts thereafter and the Court convicted the Defendant on the two-count charge and sentenced him to five years in prison on count 1 and two years in prison on count 2 without an option of fine,” the statement said.

In his judgment, Justice Nganjiwa condemned the action of the convict, noting with dismay that many people could have died from ingestion of the fake Maldox.

He stressed the need for the court to send the right message to other merchants of death who are still in the dangerous line of business.

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