Fake and adulterated medicines are being made in Dedarse in the capital. Since all the administration's surveillance at the moment is not corona-centric, the fraudsters are taking advantage of this opportunity. Antibiotics are adulterated for complex diseases like cancer. These drugs are being smuggled out of the country as well as abroad.

Experts say that these are extremely harmful to the human body.

Drug packaging work is going on. The salary for doing this work is 15 thousand rupees. The work was going on day after day with the rent of two floors of the house on Humayun Road in the capital. Residential areas therefore have less chance of suspicion.

Drugs of several reputed companies of the country were counterfeited and sent to India and China under the guise of mobile devices. This one file medicine of only 30 tablets costs 15 thousand rupees.

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Cannabis and yaba were found in a room next to the place where the painkiller 'Tapentadol' was declared a drug . The name of the company is KM Traders. Malik Mamun claimed that a man named Masud Rana used to supply him these drugs. But he does not know where these were made.

Detective police say they went to the field to catch Masood.

DMP DB Additional Deputy Commissioner of Police Mohammad Rafiqul Islam said there were some more people in the Masud Rana clique and an investigation was underway.

Counterfeit medicines are being found at wholesale prices in drug stores in Mitford and Babubazar areas of the capital. Where the price of an antibiotic from a reputed company is 10 rupees, there are medicines of the same name or a slightly different name at a nominal price.

Experts say these drugs are deadly harmful to the body. According to him, everyone should be vigilant so that these counterfeiters do not remain hidden in this disaster of Corona.

Read more: Sexually arousing drugs and cosmetics in the capital!

Professor Munir Uddin, a pharmacologist, said that as the focus shifted to Corona, the perpetrators got a chance.

The Department of Drug Administration claims they are doing their best.

Ayub Hossain, deputy director of the Drug Administration Department, said, "We have taken action on what is coming to our notice and what the detectives are catching."

Bangladeshi medicines are valued in the world market. Bangladeshi medicines are exported to about 150 countries of the world.

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@mahonali3 posted 3 years ago

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Nice

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3 years ago