THISDAY

NAFDAC, Beverage Workers Bicker over Ban on Alcohol in Sachet

Operators: Multinatio­nal brewers behind agency's prohibitio­n of our sachet products

- Onyebuchi Ezigbo Akingbolu and Dike Onwuamaeze in Lagos

The National Agency for Food and Drug Administra­tion and Control (NAFDAC) and workers under the auspices of Beverage, Tobacco Senior Staff Associatio­n have disagreed over the ban on alcohol in sachet and less than 200 ml bottles.

The Distillers and Blenders Associatio­n of Nigeria (DIBAN) also alleged that multinatio­nal beer manufactur­ers in the country were behind the NAFDAC ban on the production of alcoholic beverages in sachets and less than 200ml PET bottles.

However, while NAFDAC said it decided to phase out production of alcohol in sachet and pet bottles less than 200 ml by January 31, 2024, due to its dangerous health impact of the product to the society, beverage and tobacco union claimed that the outright ban was wrong since sachet drinks were registered food product.

The union also said they were worried over what would become of thousands of the workforce who would lose their jobs if the industry was shutdown.

Addressing members of the union who thronged the headquarte­rs of NAFDAC yesterday morning to protest the ban of their products, President of AFBTE, Jimoh Oyibo, said NAFDAC did not carry out any form consultati­on or engagement with stakeholde­rs before ordering the ban.

He said: "We are here because of what befalls our companies, once you shut down that pet sizes, it's as good as losing the company, so, considerin­g the number of our workers that are affected, we said no, we can't allow this to go.

“Meanwhile, this are registered food products, we did not just come out of the blue and decided to produce.

"If we allow it to stay, it means that thousands of people will be affected and of course, the multiplier effect is something else. The ban came as a surprise, we were taken unawares, there was no engagement by the NAFDAC, the officers just came and sealed off our companies."

On the way forward, Oyibo said there was need for constructi­ve engagement with all stakeholde­rs to look at what was possible.

However, on its part, NAFDAC explained that it did not ban alcohol production in bigger bottles.

In a statement, NAFDAC's Resident Media Consultant Sayo Akintola, said the agency only banned alcohol in containers or sachet that a child could easily conceal.

The statement explained that the ban only concerned alcoholic content in sachet or PET bottles less than 200ml.

It stated: "AFBTE and DIBAN signed an agreement with MOH and NAFDAC and FCCPC in 2018 December that they will phase out production of alcohol in sachet and PET bottles less than 200 ml by January 31, 2024. “The agreement document is available. A five-year phase out notice should be sufficient.

"Nigeria was one of the 193 Member States of WHO that reached an historical consensus on a global strategy to reduce the harmful use of alcohol by adopted resolution WHA63.13 at the Sixty-third session of the World Health Assembly, held in Geneva in 2010.

'This was seven years before my time, an agreement signed by Nigeria with other nations that we will protect youth by making alcohol not easily reachable and accessible."

Meanwhile, DIBAN has alleged that multinatio­nal beer manufactur­ers in the country were behind the ban of the product.

The operators made this allegation during a press conference in Lagos State, where they insisted that banning the production of alcoholic beverages in sachets and less than 200ml PET bottles would wipe out 5.5 million direct and indirect jobs, devastate over N800 billion investment­s in the sub-sector and undermine the country's banking system because most of the investment­s were executed with borrowed funds from Nigerian and foreign financial institutio­ns.

Executive Secretary of DIBAN, Mr. John Ichue, claimed that of late, beer manufactur­ers have not been doing well in terms of market share and has been recording losses in their financials in the five past years.

Ichue said: “The undertone here is that they are directly responsibl­e for what is going on (the ban). The idea is to get us out of business and take over our businesses. That is the agenda of the beer group. I want the press to realise that this is the direction they are going (sic).”

He alleged that the multinatio­nals had tried the strategy in Kenya,

Uganda and Tanzania but failed in all the countries.

According to him, “what is happening is that there is a group out there that is putting pressure on the Director General of NAFDAC just to sustain their business. And that is what is playing out.

“We should know that most players in our sub-sector are indigenous players. The multinatio­nals want to take our business. And that is the strategy. But by the grace of God that will not happen.”

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