The Scotsman

Illegal ‘pharmacy’ raided in

Internatio­nal crackdown targets Leith flat and internet sales

- CHRIS MARSHALL HOME AFFAIRS CORRESPOND­ENT

PRESCRIPTI­ON drugs worth tens of thousands of pounds have been recovered from an Edinburgh flat as part of an internatio­nal crackdown on counterfei­t and unlicensed medicines.

Officials from the Medicines and Healthcare Products Regulatory Agency (MHRA) carried out an early-morning raid at the property in Leith, seizing around £70,000 worth of drugs not licensed for use in the UK.

The action was part of Operation Pangea, an internatio­nal effort co-ordinated by Interpol which was designed to smash the illegal trade in prescripti­on and over-the-counter medicines.

The operation led to more than £15.7 million worth of counterfei­t and unlicensed medicines being seized across the UK, including quantities of illegal slimming pills, cancer drugs and others to treat conditions such as narcolepsy and erectile dysfunctio­n.

The Edinburgh raid was carried out after intelligen­ce suggested Polish medicines, not licensed for use in the UK, were being sold online from a resi- dential address. The MHRA carried out a “test purchase”, buying an illegal smoking-cessation drug online.

Investigat­ors found a Polish couple operating from a twobedroom flat, where one of the bedrooms had been turned into a “pharmacy”.

Speaking after the raid, Danny Lee-frost, head of operations for MHRA, said: “It’s a two-bedroom flat. One of the bedrooms is turned over to a pharmacy, shelved out with tons and tons of products, some of which we can immediatel­y recognise as medicines, some of which looks medicinal and others which we’re not sure of.

“The couple have admitted they know some of them are medicines, so we bagged those up first. But we don’t know what the rest are. We don’t know which ones are medicines, which are food supplement­s, and they don’t know either.

“There’s a hell of a lot in there, far more than we expected. We expected a much smaller operation than that.”

Mr Lee-frost said it was typical to find unregulate­d Polish medicines being sold in Polish shops and delis.

But he said this was the first known example of Polish medicines being sold on this scale over the internet in the UK.

He added: “There are none of the checks and safeguards in place to protect the consumer. For instance, what if one of the manufactur­ers of one of these products did a recall? What if they were really dangerous? The customer is not going to know about it. They have to be the authorised product for the country in which they’re sold, otherwise that whole system just collapses.

“Our advice is to not buy medicines over the internet unless you have a prescripti­on and are going to a properly registered and authorised internet pharmacy.”

The investigat­ion is ongoing, but those responsibl­e for selling the drugs could ultimately face two years in jail under the Medicines Act.

The Leith raid was part of a month-long internatio­nal crackdown which took place in 115 countries.

In total, more than £50m worth of drugs were seized

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 ?? Pictures: Lisa Ferguson/sky News ?? Police and Medicines and Healthcare Products Regulatory Agency officials raided a flat in Leith as part of an internatio­nal crackdown on illegal and unlicensed drugs
Pictures: Lisa Ferguson/sky News Police and Medicines and Healthcare Products Regulatory Agency officials raided a flat in Leith as part of an internatio­nal crackdown on illegal and unlicensed drugs
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