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  • Off-Shore Companies With Turkish Connections Export Pharmaceuticals

    OFF-SHORE COMPANIES WITH TURKISH CONNECTIONS EXPORT PHARMACEUTICALS TO ARMENIA
    Kristine Aghalaryan

    17:35, May 31, 2013

    When Tigran went to a Yerevan drugstore looking for something to
    remedy his physical sluggishness, the clerk suggested "Polijen",
    an over the counter vitamin complex supplement.

    "The insert read that the vitamin had no known serious side effects,
    so I decided to take them staring the next day. Arriving home, I
    read the box and the instructions in greater detail. What caught my
    eye and raised my suspicion was that the box stated that the vitamins
    were manufactured in America, whereas the insert said Great Britain,"
    Tigran recounts.

    So Tigran used Google to check out the truth and quickly discovered
    that Polijen causes nausea, rashes and other discomfiting symptoms in
    many who ingest the vitamin. He later concluded that World Medicine,
    the name that appears on the box, wasn't the world renowned company
    it professed to be.

    In fact, the vitamin is manufactured by EIPICO (Egyptian International
    Pharmaceutical Industries), based in Egypt, for World Medicine. The
    latter does not produce any medicine itself. It merely orders certain
    pharmaceuticals and then ships the product.

    Polijen has been imported from Egypt to Armenia since October 2005,
    via World Medicine. In June, 2006, it has been imported from Georgia
    by World Medicine and Global Pharm. In 2007, World Medicine opened an
    office in Armenia, but only informed the RA Ministry of Health of its
    operations in 2011. The company office closed soon afterwards. Today,
    a number of companies (Tonus Les, Eskulap, Alfa Pharm, Natali Pharm)
    import the vitamin Polijen to Armenia.

    In response to our written inquiry as to whether Polijen could have
    caused nausea, the RA Ministry of Health responded that the insert
    does not note nausea as a possible side effect. The ministry said it
    had received notification about possible rash outbreaks in 2009.

    Tonus Les Director Levon Hakobyan says that Polijen has proven
    itself to be an "effective and good drug" and says that nausea might
    result from not following the physician's instructions or from an
    overdose. Mr. Hakobyan appears unaware of the fact that the vitamin
    is sold over the counter, without a prescription.

    On its website, World Medicine claims to be a British pharmaceutical
    company that originated in the United States. There is no address
    given for the company. After doing a little digging on the site, we
    came across the following map which shows that the company office is
    in Istanbul, Turkey.

    On April 13, we wrote to the email address on the site, asking about
    the company's shareholders and the countries where the vitamin is
    exported to. We sent a similar inquiry to EIPICO. To date, we haven't
    received a response from either company.

    If you go to the World Medicine website today you won't see the above
    map. It's been removed.

    [map-of-WM.jpg]

    The section "About Us" is an empty blank. Luckily, through our
    Turkish and international colleagues, we've been able to uncover some
    interesting information.

    As we've noted, World Medicine is a British offshore company. The
    directors are Raushan Tahiyeu and Zafer Karaman; the former is a
    Belarus citizen residing in Turkey and the latter is Turkish.

    Tahiyeu and a man called Sohrab Mammadov were the managers of the
    Istanbul office. All have   headed a number of drug companies in
    the past. They also are the directors and shareholders in a sister
    company called Rotapharm. The Istanbul Chamber of Commerce (ICC)
    verifies this fact. According to ICC data, World Medicine registered
    in 2003 and Rotapharm, in 2007.

    A special investigative committee of the Kyrgyzstan Parliament is now
    looking into charges that Rotapharm has been supplying the country
    with substandard pharmaceuticals. Kyrgyz physicians claim that the
    drugs are causing numerous side effects in their patients.

    The Guardian newspaper covered a story where dialysis patients were
    given the drug Repretin and that unpleasant side-effects ensued.

    (Repretin is a cheap version of the generic drug epoetin, known as
    EPO; a hormone that boosts the production of red blood cells and is
    used to help kidney dialysis patients)

    Evidence obtained by the Guardian shows that the company, Rotapharm
    Ltd, is not regulated by any British medical authority, but benefits
    from loopholes in UK law and the existence of the secretive UK
    offshore industry.

    The Guardian writes:

    It advertises itself on its website as "a British pharmaceutical
    company created with the aim to improve people's health ...

    established in 2005 as a British generic pharmaceutical company by
    pharmaceutical professionals". It is said to have its headquarters
    in Saffron Walden, Essex. 

    Rotapharm is, in fact, owned by a Belarussian businessman living in
    Turkey, has no British employees, was set up offshore in the British
    Virgin Islands and buys its supply of the dialysis drug Repretin from
    a manufacturer in Egypt. The company is allowed to advertise itself as
    British because it maintains a British-registered company, with a small
    office on UK territory. British regulators are powerless to intervene. 

    Both Rotapharm Ltd and its sister company, World Medicine, owned
    by Tahiyeu, were set up anonymously in 2005 in the British Virgin
    Islands. As such, they publish no accounts and pay no taxes. 

    Two parallel firms with identical names were legally registered in
    the UK at Companies House, originally with concealed ownership and
    sham nominee directors with addresses in the Caribbean micro-state
    of St Kitts and Nevis. Later, they were re-registered with Tahiyeu
    named as owner 

    When a Guardian reporter visited the Rotapharm's "office" in Essex,
    the only person to be found was Zafer Karaman, the listed company's
    secretary, who lives locally. He refused to answer any questions
    about Rotapharm.

    The MHRA (Regulating Medicines and Medical Devices), an executive
    agency of the British Department of Health responsible for ensuring
    that all medicines and medical devices in the UK are safe, found that
    in this case they are powerless to intervene. If the medicines are
    certified in any third nation, and found to be safe and effective,
    the British agency doesn't have the authorization to take measures
    against the company.

    When pharmaceuticals are imported into Armenia, they must first be
    approved by the Ministry of Health's Drugs and Medical Technologies
    Testing Center.

    "The entity responsible for the pharmaceutical is the manufacturer.

    We aren't responsible, neither is World Medicine or the company we
    import from," says Tonus Les Director Hakobyan.

    Hakobyan says the EIPICO, the manufacturer of Polijen, is
    internationally known and has all the necessary certificates to
    manufacture pharmaceuticals, even the GMP (good manufacturing
    practice).

    He adds that the regulatory body in Armenia registered the product and
    that, regardless of who placed the order for the drug, the primary
    responsible organization is the manufacturer, followed by the local
    regulatory agency that approved its importation and use.

    Davit Nersisyan, a physician at On Clinics, says that he never
    prescribes World Medicine products to his patients. He says that
    his internet searches on the company left him unconvinced regarding
    World Medicine's "standing". He adds that none of his colleagues have
    anything good to say about the company either.

    Armenia imports 79 pharmaceutical products manufactured for World
    Medicine. In the case of Rotapharm products, Armenia stopped importing
    them in 2012.

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