Bangkok Post

Premier Li responds to health scare

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SHANGHAI: Chinese Premier Li Keqiang has vowed stern action over the latest safety scare to hit the country’s pharmaceut­ical i ndustry, as a mounting scandal over a rabies vaccine sent drug stocks tumbling.

China’s Food and Drug Administra­tion announced late on Sunday that it had ordered all production stopped at one of the country’s biggest vaccine makers, Changchun Changsheng Biotechnol­ogy.

Mr Li said the latest case had crossed a “line of human ethics”, and he vowed a thorough investigat­ion and harsh consequenc­es for any infraction­s or lax supervisio­n.

“(We) must resolutely strike with heavy blows all law-breaking criminal behaviour, severely punish the criminals according to the law, and hold accountabl­e those who were negligent in supervisio­n,” Mr Li said in a statement posted late on Sunday on the government’s website.

Regulators said last week they had halted production of a rabies vaccine made by the company, which is based in northeaste­rn China, after finding fabricated records and other problems during an inspection.

China is hit regularly by quality-control scandals, fuelling fear over the safety of food and medicines and anger at regulatory lapses.

Censors and regulators struggled to stay abreast of the public’s response to the latest scandal, deleting posts on WeChat over the weekend as state media tried to take control of the narrative.

Stocks of major Chinese vaccine producers plunged yesterday.

In Shenzhen, Walvax Biotechnol­ogy, which makes a range of flu and other vaccines, dropped by its 10% daily allowable limit, as did vaccine suppliers Shenzhen Kangtai Biological Products and Chongqing Zhifei Biological Products.

After a brief trading halt, shares of Changchun Changsheng’s parent company also fell by the 10% limit.

The CFDA said last week that the problemati­c rabies vaccine had not left Changsheng’s factory, but state media reports have suggested otherwise.

Changchun Changsheng said on Sunday it had already halted production of diphtheria, tetanus and pertussis vaccine that regulators found to be sub-standard.

But concerns have grown that problemati­c vaccines had already been administer­ed to children.

Authoritie­s in Hebei announced yesterday that nearly 150,000 people in the northern province received sub-standard diphtheria, tetanus and pertussis vaccine made by another firm, Wuhan Institute of Biological Products.

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