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Friday, November 15, 2024

Killer cough syrup: Gambia families reject $20,000 for deaths compensation

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Bereaved families of the 70 Gambian children who died of acute kidney injury (AKI), allegedly linked to consuming Indian-made cough syrups, have rejected a compensation offer from the government.

The ministry of gender had offered $20,000 (£17,000) to be shared among the families.

Ebrima Sanyang, the chairperson of the grieving families, said the money was “an insult to the victims”.

Alleged India made cough syrup

He said that accepting the money would mean that they were not fighting for justice.

The families want the state’s Medicine Control Agency to withdraw its initial claim that the children had died in flood waters and not from faulty medicine.

They also want the agency to be barred from investigations called for by the president.

In October, the World Health Organization (WHO) issued a global alert over four brands of cough syrups, saying they could be linked to acute kidney damage, following reports from The Gambia of children diagnosed with serious kidney problems.

AFRIPOST reports that Nigerian National Agency for Food and Drug Administration and Control (NAFDAC) warned Nigerians to watch out for certain substandard cough syrup in circulation.

The Indian company – Maiden Pharmaceuticals – has said it adheres to internationally recognised quality-control standards.

But some of its products have failed to meet national or state-level quality-control standards in India. BBC

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