Shanghai police have uncovered more than 400 kilograms of fake
Tamiflu pills, Shanghai Municipal Public Security Bureau announced
yesterday. Thirteen people have been arrested.
The investigation showed that the gang made more than 1.6
million yuan (US$200,000) by selling the drugs on the Internet and
through other channels to Heilongjiang, Liaoning, Jiangsu, Guangdong provinces and countries in Southeast
Asia. Relevant departments are still trying to retrieve the fake
pills.
Early this year, the bureau received an order from the Ministry
of Public Security to co-operate on busting an inter-province fake
medicine ring. They later found a man named Wang Xun, allegedly one
of the main suspects.
It is said that the ring, led by Wang, rented two workshops in
Luodian County of Baoshan District and Waigang County of Jiading
District under the name of Shanghai Xidi Pharmaceutical Company and
produced fake Tamiflu around the clock from November 2005 to May
this year.
This March the ministry planned a joint raid in Shanghai,
Heilongjiang, Liaoning, Jiangsu and Guangdong provinces. On May 24
and 25, 11 suspects including Wang Xun were arrested and the two
workshops were shut down. More than 400 kilograms of Tamiflu pills
and 46 tons of raw materials were found.
The ingredients of the pill were not released because of fears
it would be copied, but it is said to be extremely volatile as the
method of production can easily cause explosions. Experts from work
safety inspection, environment protection and food and drug
departments have taken steps to ensure the confiscated goods are
safe.
Two other suspects were recently arrested with fake pills by
Shanghai Municipal Public Security Bureau in Guizhou and Guangdong
provinces.
(China Daily August 30, 2006)