Britain is being flooded with dangerous fake slimming pills, cancer medication and other potentially fatal drugs as criminal gangs move into the pharmaceutical market.
Fake and unlicensed medicines worth nearly £16million have been seized in the last week alone in a record haul by drugs inspectors.
One expert claimed the trade in counterfeit medication had become the most profitable of all crimes.
Fake drugs worth £15.8 million have been seized in the UK as part of a global crackdown on counterfeit products, that saw a total of £51.6 million of goods seized across 115 countries
The seizures are the result of a month-long international crackdown on the illegal internet trade of medical products, that yielded £51.6 million worth of items across 115 countries
Officials confiscated more than six million tablets and medical devices in raids across the country during the crackdown on online sales.
The seizures include thousands of potentially deadly slimming pills, medication to aid concentration, anaemia drugs and erectile dysfunction tablets. In an alarming development, 15,000 doses of fake cancer drugs were also found.
Gangs are moving away from cocaine and heroin to focus on health products, the Medicines and Healthcare Products Regulatory Agency (MHRA) warned.
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Alastair Jeffrey, head of enforcement, said criminals had realised there were huge sums to be made.
‘Counterfeit medicines are the most profitable source across the whole criminal spectrum,’ he added. ‘We are beginning to see more established criminal groups entering this space. Risk is low and the profits are very high.’
Mr Jeffrey said jail sentences for making and selling fake drugs were too low compared with narcotics, adding: ‘It’s two years, it’s not a police priority. Sentencing does not reflect the severity of the crime and does not act as a deterrent.’
6.2 MILLION DOSES OF FALSIFIED MEDICINES FOR RANGE OF CONDITIONS SEIZED IN THE UK
epilepsy
asthma
acne
narcolepsy
breast cancer
cholesterol reduction
erectile dysfunction
analgesics
hair loss
weight loss
painkillers
fertility
prostate cancer
anxiety and insomnia
skin lightening
diabetes
premature ejaculation
tanning
pain management
anti-inflammatory
steroids
anti-viral
eye drops
bacterial infection
eczema
eyelash hair growth
depression
hormones
dental equipment
fake condoms
Harmful slimming pills, erectile dysfunction tablets, anaemia medication and narcolepsy remedies are among the products seized
The drugs seizures were part of a global operation led by Interpol that resulted in items worth £51.6million being impounded in 115 countries.
In Britain, officers also closed down 1,380 websites. But Mark Jackson, the MHRA’s head of intelligence, said criminals were increasingly using social media to sell illegal medication.
He said that putting Kamagra – an unlicensed Indian version of Viagra – into a Twitter search would lead to tweets containing links to websites that sell the illegal drug.
We are beginning to see more established criminal groups entering this space… Risk is low and the profits are very high. Counterfeit medicines are the most profitable source across the whole criminal spectrum
Alastair Jeffrey, MHRA head of enforcement
He added: ‘The criminal can still put their link to their shop. There is no doubt social media … provides a great deal of anonymity if you are doing something illegal.’
He said social media sites such as Facebook, Twitter and YouTube were co-operating with the MHRA to tackle the problem. Last week alone, YouTube removed 320 videos from its website.
Danny Lee-Frost, head of operations at the MHRA, led the raids and co-ordinated searches of suspect packages at mail sorting offices and airports.
He said most of the fake drugs in Britain came from India and China. MHRA investigators confiscated thousands of counterfeit condoms from a flat in Sheffield, a Polish ‘pharmacy’ selling unlicensed drugs in West London and 30,000 dangerous slimming pills from a cottage in East Sussex.
He is particularly worried about the 15,000 cancer medication pills found – most of them for breast and prostate cancers. ‘We are starting to see more counterfeit oncology products,’ he said. ‘There’s a vast amount of money to be made in those products.’
Mr Jeffrey added: ‘Criminals aren’t interested in your health – they are interested in your money and get this by selling a potentially dangerous product.’
The Medicines and Healthcare Products Regulatory Agency today revealed unlicensed foreign medicines and fake condoms were also found
IDYLLIC COTTAGE ‘WAS CENTRE OF SCAM TARGETING SLIMMERS’
With lavender in the garden, a BMW in the drive and 인도카마그라 a tennis court across the road, this cottage seems the very image of middle-class success.
But the £360,000, three-bedroom house is thought to be the distribution centre for a drugs ring that allegedly imports dangerous diet pills from China and sells them to teenagers.
The tablets – called Lida Daidaihua – cost just 63p each. They claim to help teenagers lose ‘pubertal’ puppy fat and new mothers get their figure back.
Packages of pills were sent daily from the local Post Office to this semi-detached house in Wadhurst, Sussex, which was believed to be the hub for an illegal distribution network
Last week, the Mail accompanied police as they seized pills worth £40,000 from the cottage in Wadhurst, East Sussex. Drugs investigators had discovered that packages of pills were being sent daily from the local post office.
Officers believe the cottage distributed drugs for the website You Can Weight Loss, which advertised ‘herbal’ pills containing bitter orange extracts and Indian lotus. But the main ingredient, sibutramine, was not mentioned.
This banned substance was used in the prescription drug Reductil, but was withdrawn from sale in 2010 over claims that it raised the risk of heart attack and stroke. It was linked to 17 British deaths in the decade before it was outlawed.
Lida Daidaihua, which is illegally imported from unregulated laboratories in China, contains three times as much sibutramine as Reductil.
Danny Lee-Frost, head of operations at the Medicines and Healthcare Products Regulatory Agency, said: ‘These are potentially very dangerous pills.’
A British man who lives at the property claimed the tablets were left in his attic by a ‘rogue tenant’.