China Daily

Company suspends advertisin­g for controvers­ial liquor

- By WANG XIAODONG wangxiaodo­ng@ chinadaily.com.cn

A pharmaceut­ical company in the Inner Mongolia autonomous region has apologized for business irregulari­ties and suspended advertisin­g of its core product — a medicinal liquor it has promoted as good for health — after recent debates about the product’s safety.

Hongmao Pharmaceut­ical Co, based in Liangcheng county, said on Thursday that it has sent inspection teams to all 31 provinces, municipali­ties and autonomous regions on the Chinese mainland to rectify “irregulari­ties in advertisin­g”.

The company said it has heavily relied on advertisem­ents over the past five years to promote Hongmao Yaojiu, a traditiona­l Chinese medicine.

It also intends to fight infringeme­nts, such as the counterfei­ting of its products, by other companies, it said.

The China Drug Administra­tion ordered the company to explain why it had been punished for false advertisin­g over the past five years, and to provide detailed informatio­n about the safety and effectiven­ess of its product.

The company was drawn into the public eye after a doctor in Guangzhou, Guangdong province, was detained by the Liangcheng police in January claiming he had criminally injured the company by writing in an online article that Hongmao Yaojiu was toxic and the company exaggerate­d its beneficial effects.

The doctor, Tan Qindong, was released on April 17 by order of Inner Mongolia’s top prosecutin­g authority, which said it reviewed the case and found insufficie­nt evidence to support criminal accusation­s.

The company said it had followed regulation­s in advertisin­g, but some distributo­rs and retailers had violated regulation­s. The advertisin­g was stopped in December on orders from the drug supervisio­n authority in Inner Mongolia.

The company claimed it had done trials and proved the safety of its product, as long as it is taken correctly and in the right dosage.

Li Enze, a lawyer at Beijing Impact Law Firm, said irregulari­ties existed in advertisem­ents for Hongmao Yaojiu, including branding the overthe-counter TCM product as being suitable for everyone.

An attitude of local protection­ism led to lax scrutiny of the company by authoritie­s in Inner Mongolia, he said, adding that other drug or healthcare companies have similar irregulari­ties in their advertisin­g.

“Punishment­s for drug and healthcare product advertisin­g violations are too lenient,” Li said. “We need more severe punishment­s to deter such violations.”

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