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Interpol, Top Drug Makers to Fight Fake Medicines

March 13, 2013
  Counterfeit cough syrup and other medicines ll have caused eight mass poisonings around the world including in 2006 in Panama where more than 100 people died.

LYON -- Interpol on Tuesday announced a deal with the world's top pharmaceutical companies to fight fake drugs which threaten the health of millions, especially in poor countries.

Twenty-nine leading companies have pledged 4.5 million euros (US$5.9 million) over three years to improve the fight against the counterfeit industry, boost public awareness and crack down on illegal manufacturers.

"With no country, no drug, no medical product immune from counterfeiting, a global effort is needed to combat this threat which puts the lives of millions of people at risk every single day," said Interpol Secretary General Ronald K. Noble.

Others highlighted the potentially deadly hazards of fake medicines.

"In the case of drug counterfeiting, it can mean the difference between life and death for a patient," said Christopher Viehbacher, the head of  drug firm Sanofi (IW 1000/98).

"It is estimated that 10% of medicines are fake and these figures can go up to 50%, particularly in some poorer countries."

According to the World Health Organization more than 50%of medicines bought online have been found to be fake.

Counterfeit cough syrup and other medicines laced with diethylene glycol have caused eight mass poisonings around the world including in 2006 in Panama where more than 100 people died, many of them children, an Interpol statement said.

In 2012, some 109 heart patients in Pakistan died after taking fake medicine, it added.

Copyright Agence France-Presse, 2013

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