The Asian Age

HC suspends Centre’s drug ban for a month

- AGE CORRESPOND­ENT

The Delhi high court on Friday suspended for a month the Centre’s ban on private companies producing and distributi­ng Oxytocin, a drug used to induce labour contractio­ns during child birth and control bleeding after it.

A bench of Justices S. Ravindra Bhat and A. K. Chawla passed an interim order on the pleas seeking to set aside the government’s ban, which was slated to come into effect from Saturday.

The court said on the first view, it was of the opinion that the prohibitio­n on sale and manufactur­e for domestic use of Oxytocin should be suspended for one month. The bench listed the matter for September 12 for further arguments in the matter.

The government had in April this year restricted private companies from making or supplying the drug, used to treat excessive bleeding in women during child birth and help new mothers lactate, prevent its alleged misuse in the dairy sector to increase milk secretion and production.

As per the Centre’s notificati­on, the state- run Karnataka Antibiotic­s and Pharmaceut­icals Ltd ( KAPL) was solely allowed by the Centre to make the drug to meet the country’s needs.

The court noted that the material placed before it showed that when the decision was taken in February this year to restrict the sale of Oxytocin, KAPL was not even licenced to manufactur­e the drug and it was issued the licence only this April.

Additional Solicitor General Maninder Acharya, appearing for the Centre, said the public sector unit had the capacity to cater to the entire nationwide demand for the drug and the government was taking the full responsibi­lity for it.

One purported harmful effect of Oxytocin, mentioned by the Centre, was in the dairy sector where it was injected into the animals to increase their milk production. The court was hearing pleas of BGP Products Operations GmbH, a subsidiary of Mylan Laboratori­es, Neon Laboratori­es, and NGO: All India Drug Action Network ( AIDAN) which works to ensure access to essential medicines.

Some private companies which made and sold the drug in India are Pfizer, Mylan and Neon. The NGO contended in its plea that it would not be advisable to depend on one company alone.

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