Thursday, June 11, 2009

Fake 'Made-in-India' drugs exported from China


jun 11th, 2009

darn clever, those inscrutable little chinese guys! (i wonder why they, the biggest boosters of "south asia", don't label them 'made in south asia' :-)

of course, we should have played this game long ago, and still can. i have suggested, for instance:

1. flooding the mohammedan bruthas in sinkiang with large quantities of small arms and ammunition labelled 'made in pakistan'. that would be fair revenge for the chinese shipping nuclear weapons to pakistan along the karakoram highway; this would be considered blowback along the same karakoram highway (which of course passes through the part of j&k that china has captured, ie. aksai chin)

2. flooding sind, baluchistan, and the NWFP in pakistan with (slightly defective) medium-heavy arms like bazookas, rocket-propelled grenade launchers, and shoulder-launched missiles. they must be defective and prone to blow up (making hamburger out of the would-be martyrs), because that will immediately make the bruthas believe the "made in china" label on them. for fun, the chinese lettering on them can also occasionally say "your mother wears army boots!". no fear of the ISI reading that stuff

3. shipping small quantities of poisoned food items labelled 'made in china' to europe and america.

where are you creative manufacturers of india? i mean like the guys who used to make "made by USA" t-shirts (ie ulhasnagar sindhi association) :-)


---------- Forwarded message ----------
From: Girish

 
India said on Thursday it is lodging a strong protest with China against fake anti-malarial 'Made-in-India' drugs detained by this Nigerian authorities, which maligns the Indian pharmaceutical industry for consignments that originated from the neighbouring country. 
 
It said the government's drug regulatory authority (NAFDAC) has reported the detention of a large consignment of fake anti-malarial generic pharmaceuticals labelled 'Made in India' but produced in China.
 
'After a laboratory analysis by NAFDAC, the drugs have been found to be fake and, had they not been intercepted, about 642,000 adults would have been affected,' it said.
 
According to the Indian High Commissioner in Nigeria, the consignment containing Maloxine and Amalar tablets, used for the treatment of malaria, was valued at Naira 32.1 million and was produced, packed and shipped from China.
 
 



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