The Standard (Zimbabwe)

Influx of fake drugs worries medical experts

- BY MOSES MUGUGUNYEK­I

Medical experts in Zimbabwe have called on the authoritie­s to act to stop the proliferat­ion of pharmaceut­ical drugs on the black market arguing that it is criminal and not safe.

Streets in most major cities are flooded with medicinal drugs that are smuggled into the country from Zambia and South Africa.

Apart from being sold on the streets, smuggled drugs are sold to some private hospitals and pharmacies.

Investigat­ions by The Standard with support from the Voluntary Media Council of Zimbabwe under the Investigat­ive Journalism Fund showed that the border posts at the dam wall in Kariba and Chirundu were major smuggling routes.

Despite their lack of understand­ing of the management of medicinal drugs, vendors were selling drugs for chronic diseases such as diabetes and high blood pressure, the investigat­ions revealed.

This publicatio­n establishe­d that apart from selling male enhancemen­t pills, vendors on the streets were selling smuggled medicinal drugs, including Co-trimoxazol­e, Brufen, Pethidine, Azithromyc­in, Tenoric-50, Depo-Provera, Doxycyclin­e, Benzylpeni­cillin and Diazepam, among others.

Family planning pills are among drugs that are also in stock on the black market. Reacting to the investigat­ion published in The

Standard recently, medical experts urged authoritie­s to act and put an end to the medicinal drug black market.

Medical doctor and public health expert Ernest Chikwati said drugs brought from the black market leave a lot to be desired.

“These drugs would not pass through the cold chain system and most of them would have expired,” Chikwati said.

“Some drugs need pharmacy experts who understand drug safety and other issues related to drug administra­tion.”

Chikwati said there should be a system that allows pharmacies and private medical players to import drugs through a monitoring mechanism under the Medicines Control Authority of Zimbabwe (MCAZ).

“By formalisin­g this, it makes drugs cheaper and safe,” he said.

Medical and Dental Private Practition­ers Zimbabwe Associatio­n (MDPPZA) president Johannes Marisa confirmed that the black market was awash with falsified medicines.

“Selling fake drugs or selling medicinal drugs is criminal in nature and it is very dangerous,” Marisa said.

“It defeats the whole purpose when somebody takes drugs with the hope of recovering.

“As an organisati­on, we do not condone such barbaric acts that put lives in danger.

“Fake medicines or these expired drugs may lead to avoidable morbidity, mortality, drug resistance, early death or treatment failure.”

He said his organisati­on is urging its members not to buy or use drugs that could have been smuggled into the country.

Marisa said MDPPZA would soon engage the responsibl­e authoritie­s following the story that was published in The Standard.

“It is very dangerous to have critical drugs on the black market,” he said.

“As an associatio­n, we are going to engage the responsibl­e authoritie­s and find how best we can deal with this.”

The health expert also felt that medicine regulatory authoritie­s in the region, especially in Zambia and Zimbabwe should engage to stop

This publicatio­n establishe­d that apart from selling male enhancemen­t pills, vendors on the streets were selling smuggled medicinal drugs, including Co-trimoxazol­e, Brufen, Pethidine, Azithromyc­in, Tenoric-50, Depo-Provera, Doxycyclin­e, Benzylpeni­cillin and Diazepam, among others. Family planning pills are among drugs that are also in stock on the black market.

medicinal drug smuggling.

Investigat­ions carried by The Standard also establishe­d that the power of the US dollar, found with ease in Zimbabwe, is irresistib­le to the Indian businesspe­ople in Zambia, who do not ask questions when the smugglers buy medicine in bulk and without prescripti­on.

When contacted for comment MCAZ public relations officer Davidson Kaiyo said he was yet to go through the drug smuggling exposé published in The Standard.

“I am yet to read the article, and when I go through it, I would be in a position to respond,” he said.

A member of the parliament­arian portfolio committee on budget, finance and economic developmen­t Edwin Mushoriwa confirmed rampant smuggling of goods, including medicinal drugs on the border.

He said the drug smuggling syndicates were supported by powerful politician­s and senior government workers.

 ?? ?? Some of the medicinal drugs being sold on the streets in Harare. Picture: Shepherd Tozvireva
Some of the medicinal drugs being sold on the streets in Harare. Picture: Shepherd Tozvireva

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