Accra, July 31, GNA - The Food and Drugs Board (FDB) on Thursday
destroyed quantities of ceased food items from the Accra central markets,
they described as harmful and dangerous to human health when consumed. The items, which were crushed by a bulldozer truck at the Mallam landfill
site, included several cartons of Star Kist Tuna flakes, SMA Baby Formula,
Maggi cubes, Baked Beans, gallons of unlabeled fruit juices, Henekins
Schnapps, and sachets of water. Other expired products such as cooking oil, non-iodated salt, biscuits,
candies that have been ceased were also destroyed. Briefing the media in Accra, Mr Kofi Essel, Acting Head of the
Inspectorate Department of FDB, said it was the mandate of the Board to
ensure the safety of the citizens and to ensure that food products and drugs
consumed were wholesome and met the required standards. He explained that reports from the Board's Surveillance Department
showed that manufacturers, importers and suppliers have moved from
counterfeit drugs to food, and that most of the products came from
neighbouring Togo. These imitated products sell cheaper than the original products and it is
sometimes difficult to distinguish between the original and the faked
products. Mr Essel noted that various laboratory tests conducted on the ceased
products, however, revealed that there was a sharp difference between the
original and the imitated ones. Citing the Schnapps as an example, Mr Essel said the original schnapps
was made from grains whilst the imitated one was found to contain Benzine
compound from a petroleum product, which was cancerous. Asked how people will differentiate between the fake and original
products, Mr Essel explained that the original products had the coding on
the top of the lid whilst the fake ones had the coding at the base. Mr Essel advised the general public to look out for differences in
products and to avoid buying cheap products or else "you will be buying
sickness and putting your health at a greater risk". In another development, the FDB has warned operators of herbal clinics
to endeavour to register the herbal products they administer to their patients
with the Board or face the consequences. A tour to two herbal clinics in Tema revealed that some of those facilities
were not adhering to the directives by the Board. At the Ahoto Herbal Clinic at Community 7, out of the 15 herbal
products, only three were registered with the Board. Mr Samuel Asante Boateng, Senior Regulatory Officer of the Board, said
the non-registration of the herbal products made it extremely difficult for the
Board to guarantee the safety of the people. He noted that herbal medicines have been in use for ages, but that there
was the need now to conduct extra tests to ascertain their safety as they are
being bottled. At the Adom Herbal Clinic, out of the 12 products being dispensed at the clinic, five were registered with the Board whilst the others have just passed through the safety reports from the Department of Pharmacology of the
Kwame Nkrumah University of Science and Technology (KNUST) and were
awaiting registration by the Board. Mr Boateng urged practitioners to explore the possibility of using other
research institutions like Noguchi and KNUST if the Centre for Scientific
Research into Plant Medicine at Mampong was delaying the process. He accepted the fact that it was a long process and sometimes took a
year for one herbal product to be investigated, not forgetting the high cost involved, but "there are other research institutions that could do the same
work and should be explored". Dr Simon Golo Kuma, Managing Director of Ahoto, and Madam Abena
Serwaa Owusu, owner of Adom herbal clinic, pleaded with the FDB to give
them some time to have their products registered, since it involved a lot of
money.