Parents may have to
re-innoculate their children after police smash a criminal syndicate accused of
selling fake vaccines for more than a decade to health clinics across Indonesia
©Ahmad (AFP)
|
Indonesian
parents were being advised Wednesday to consult their doctors and consider
re-innoculating their children as a massive counterfeit vaccine scandal sweeps
the country.
AFP report continues:
Police smashed a criminal
syndicate last week accused of selling fake vaccines for more than a decade to
health clinics across Indonesia, a vast archipelago of 255 million people.
Sixteen people, including
a married couple believed to have masterminded the scheme, have been arrested
over their alleged involvement. They are accused of distributing fake boosters
for diseases including tuberculosis, hepatitis B and tetanus.
Indonesia's health
ministry is working with police to determine the scale of the problem. The
national food and drugs agency has confiscated vaccines from nearly 30 health
clinics, but it is not yet known how far the syndicate reached.
"We are working with
the national food and drugs agency to collect data and take all measures
necessary," health ministry spokesman Oscar Primadi told AFP.
"If vaccinations
need to be redone then we will do it, it's not impossible."
The Indonesian Pediatric
Association said parents unsure if their child could be affected should ask their
hospital or health clinic about the origin of their vaccines.
"If you're still
unsure, you can redo the vaccination. It does not have any negative impacts on
a child's health," association chairman Aman Bhakti Pulungan told AFP.
The scandal was brought
to light after a major pharmaceutical company alerted Indonesian authorities
that some of its products had been counterfeited.
The case has caused nationwide concern and condemnation, with Indonesian President Joko Widodo demanding the harshest punishment possible for this "extraordinary crime".
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