MANILA:
The rapid growth of Internet commerce
has led to an explosion of counterfeit drugs sold around the world, with China
the biggest source of fake medicines, pharmaceutical experts said Thursday.
The
illicit trade is now believed to be worth around 75 billion dollars globally,
with criminal gangs increasingly using the web to move their products across
borders, said Scott Davis, Pfizer's top security expert for Asia.
"The
Internet has led to an explosion of availability of these products," Davis
told a health forum in Manila.
"About
90 per cent of counterfeit drugs... are at some point marketed and sold on the
Internet."
He said
websites selling fake drugs commonly did not have physical addresses and
exploited weak or murky customs regulations to ship their products.
"They
are getting more sophisticated," he said, adding that law enforcers were
finding it ever more difficult to tell the fake drugs from the real.
"We
often have to send the pills to our labs to tell us the difference," he
said.
The US
pharmaceutical giant Pfizer makes the anti-impotence drug Viagra, which along
with Eli Lilly's Cialis are among the world's most widely copied drugs.
"But
now it's not just Viagra or lifestyle drugs but other medicines like
malarials," he said. "These criminals will copy anything to make a
buck."
He said
China was the number one source of counterfeit drugs last year, followed by
Jordan, the United States, Israel and Canada.
Catherine
Dauphin, a World Health Organization expert on pharmaceutical policy, told the
same forum that more than half the drugs sold on Internet sites without
approval from governments were fake.
She
said criminal gangs typically lured the public into buying fake drugs by
offering them at cheaper rates and without the need for medical prescriptions.
- AFP/wm
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