The Daily Telegraph

Millions of inadequate face masks seized at Heathrow

- Daily Telegraph Reporter By

MILLIONS of substandar­d face masks and thousands of fake hand sanitisers have been seized at Heathrow since the pandemic started.

London Trading Standards said the majority of masks seized had been labelled with false claims or fake safety certificat­es and around 4.25 million had to undergo label amendments before they were released.

A total of 2.25 million masks were found not to comply with legal safety standards.

Trading standards teams examined a further 1.5million face masks and no issues were found.

Many of the consignmen­ts were referred to trading standards by Border Force teams at the airport.

The teams also seized 8,000 fake hand sanitisers, branded Andrex and Comfort, at the airport.

Suspicions were raised as they had identical packaging and labelling, except for the brand name, and the same batch code on the entire consignmen­t. Identical fake sanitiser products have been found on sale in Bexley, southeast London, by trading standards, officials said. A further 4,500 hand sanitisers with false labelling were seized at the airport.

As well as stopping dodgy imports, trading standards are increasing­ly concerned about the sale of unsafe Ukmade hand sanitisers that fail to meet safety standards. Tower Hamlets trading standards have recently found Ukmade hand sanitiser on sale online from a local shop that contains the banned substance Triclosan. A team from Ealing council recently found 454,500 face masks described as “antivirus” where fake safety certificat­ion was supplied.

Ealing also seized 60,000 face masks that failed to have the necessary importers’ details, batch, declaratio­n of conformity or test certificat­es available to demonstrat­e compliance, as well as 3,390 hand sanitisers, which lacked any legally required informatio­n regarding ingredient­s, batch, traceabili­ty, warnings or instructio­ns.

Stephen Knight, operations director at London trading standards, said: “There has been a surge in firms attempting to import substandar­d face masks, many with false labelling or faked safety certificat­es.

“Trading standards teams are being pragmatic in seeking to let these important goods through, once misleading labelling is removed, and the necessary safety compliance can be shown.”

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