Gambia: Trial over children’s cough syrup deaths resumes

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The trial in the adulterated syrups affair which caused the death of children last year in The Gambia resumed before the Banjul High Court.

The families of the victims, grouped within the AKI association, are awaiting convictions at the end of this trial which was delayed in July and then postponed in October after the five defendants did not attend the hearing.

Some 70 children aged 5 and under died in 2022 from kidney failure after taking the over-the-counter medicines.

Nineteen plaintiffs are suing five defendants company Maiden Pharmaceuticals, local distributor Atlantic Pharmaceuticals, the Medical Controls Agency, the Ministry of Health and Attorney General Dawda A. Jallow to demand they admit that the children were killed by consuming contaminated medicines.

Maiden Pharmaceuticals has denied the allegations.

At some point, the Gambian health authorities cited E.coli bacteria as a possible cause of the deaths.

In July, a government taskforce in The Gambia announced its finding that four cough syrups imported from India were responsible for the deaths.

Plaintiffs are demanding about $230,000 per child in damages.

They are also suing for an admission that the MCA failed in its statutory duty to regulate the quality and safety of medicines.

The Gambian government also said it was exploring options to take legal action against the Indian manufacturer.

According to the World Health Organization (WHO), lab tests found “unacceptable amounts” of diethylene glycol and ethylene glycol, which are commonly used as antifreeze and can be fatal when ingested.

Beginning in September last year, The Gambia ordered a recall of several cough and cold medications, as well as all products manufactured by the Indian Laboratory Maiden Pharmaceuticals from which the adulterated syrups originated.

In the aftermath of the scandal, India launched an investigation and shut down the Maiden Pharmaceuticals plant last October.

And The Gambia’s president Barrow vowed to create a national laboratory to test for drug quality and food safety, which doesn’t exist in the country.

In January, the WHO announced a call for “immediate and coordinated action” to eradicate non-compliant and falsified medicines, in particular tainted cough syrups linked to the deaths of 300 children in Gambia, Indonesia and Uzbekistan.

Africanews/Hauwa M.

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