BBC World Service
BBCIndian authorities have banned two highly-addictive opioids in response to a BBC investigation which discovered they have been fuelling a public well being disaster in components of West Africa.
In a letter seen by the BBC from India’s Medication Controller Normal, Dr Rajeev Singh Raghuvanshi stated permission to fabricate and export the medicine had been withdrawn
BBC Eye found one pharmaceutical company, Aveo, had been illegally exporting a dangerous mixture of tapentadol and carisoprodol in nations like Ghana, Nigeria, and Cote D’Ivoire.
India’s Meals and Drug Administration stated the corporate’s manufacturing facility in Mumbai had since been raided and its complete inventory seized.
The round from Dr Raghuvanshi, dated to Friday, cited the BBC investigation in his determination to ban all mixtures of tapentadol and carisoprodol, which was to be carried out with instant impact.
He stated this additionally got here after officers had regarded into “the potential of drug abuse and its dangerous impression on inhabitants”.
Tapentadol is a strong opioid, and carisoprodol is a muscle relaxant so addictive it’s banned in Europe.
Carisoprodol is authorised to be used within the US, however just for quick durations of as much as three weeks. Withdrawal signs embody anxiousness, insomnia and hallucinations.
The mix of the 2 medicine just isn’t licensed to be used wherever on the planet as they’ll trigger respiration difficulties and seizures and an overdose can kill.
Regardless of the dangers, these opioids are fashionable avenue medicine in lots of West African nations, as a result of they’re so low cost and broadly accessible.

Publicly-available export knowledge present that Aveo Prescription drugs, together with a sister firm known as Westfin Worldwide, has shipped thousands and thousands of those tablets to Ghana and different West African nations.
The BBC World Service additionally discovered packets of those tablets with the Aveo emblem on the market on the streets of Nigeria, and in Ivoirian cities and cities.
Nigeria, with a inhabitants of 225 million folks, offers the most important marketplace for these tablets. It has been estimated that about 4 million Nigerians abuse some type of opioid, in response to the nation’s Nationwide Bureau of Statistics.
As a part of the investigation, the BBC additionally despatched an undercover operative – posing as an African businessman seeking to provide opioids to Nigeria – inside one in all Aveo’s factories in India, the place they filmed one in all Aveo’s administrators, Vinod Sharma, exhibiting off the identical harmful merchandise the BBC discovered on the market throughout West Africa.
Within the secretly recorded footage, the operative tells Sharma that his plan is to promote the tablets to youngsters in Nigeria “who all love this product”.
Sharma in response replies “OK,” earlier than explaining that if customers take two or three tablets without delay, they’ll “chill out” and agrees they’ll get “excessive”.
In direction of the top of the assembly, Sharma says: “That is very dangerous for the well being,” including that “these days, that is enterprise”.
Sharma and Aveo Prescription drugs didn’t reply to a request for remark when the BBC’s preliminary investigation was printed.
India’s Meals and Drug Administration stated a sting operation noticed Aveo’s complete inventory seized and additional manufacturing halted in a press release on Friday. Additional authorized motion can be taken in opposition to the corporate, it added.
The company stated it was “absolutely ready” to take motion in opposition to anybody concerned in “unlawful actions that tarnish the repute of the nation”.
The FDA has been instructed to hold out additional inspections to forestall the availability of the medicine, it stated.


















































