CoverHeadlinesIllicit Trade Negative impact of substandard products on investment of original brand owners huge – SON By maritimemag February 6, 2020 ShareTweet 0 The Standards Organisation of Nigeria (SON) has described the negative impact of substandard products on the investment of the original brand owners as huge. Its Director-General, Osita Aboloma, made this known at the destruction of the substandard mobile phone accessories worth N480 million in Epe, Lagos. Aboloma, represented by Mr Obiora Manafa, Director, Inspectorate, Compliance and Directorate of SON, said that the organisation was on top of its game to ensure that substandard goods did not find their ways into the Nigerian markets. “We are here today to destroy some products that are dangerous, and we do not want them to enter the markets. “They are mobile phone accessories and they are fake, the major brands such as Samsung, Techno, Infinix, Huawei and lots of others. We seized these items late last year. “We seized them from a commercial warehouse in Lagos, but the products are not owned by the owner of the warehouse. “We subjected these products to laboratory analysis and they all failed,” he said. According to him, importers of the substandard mobile accessories have committed an offence by faking these known brands. Aboloma said that. “First, they have contravened the law of the country. They faked known brands and when we showed these products to the original brand owners, they denied ownership which means that they are fake brands. “We also went further to do the analysis and they all failed the test. We are also looking at these accessories from two aspects which include the economic and safety points of view. “The economic point is that the accessories you buy will not last more than a week, and this to us, do not make economic sense, because you do not get value for the money spent. “The safety aspect is that these accessories pose a serious threat to the users. When we tested the insulation parameters of these products, they all failed woefully. “The IEC standards of power states that the minimum power you get from these products should be 1000 megaohms, but the values we got after testing gave only 60 megaohms. “So, it is as bad as using naked wires, because it is not preventing any flow of current, exposing the users to electric shocks and can even burn houses,” he added. Aboloma noted that SON could not allow these products to enter the Nigerian market, saying the products were destroyed after obtaining a court order. “These products are valued over N480 million. We are not happy burning these products because it is a loss to owners. “The owners have spent so much money to import these products and the whole investment is going into flames. “It is even a drain on the national economy and nobody is happy about that, but we have our primary responsibility to protect the lives and property of Nigerians. “Life supersedes everything and we are not going to allow these products into the markets,” he said. Aboloma said the move was to serve as deterrent to unscrupulous importers who indulged in illicit trade to short-change unsuspecting consumers of their hard-earned money spent purchasing these goods. The SON director-general stressed that the safety of lives and property of Nigerians was of great importance to the organisation. The director-general said SON was still on the trail of the importers of the goods with no economic value, pointing out that the agency would stop at nothing until it got them prosecuted. Also, at the event, the Head, Enforcement, Nigeria Copyright Commission (NCC), Lagos Office, Charles Amudipe, commended SON for its fight against substandard goods in the country. “At NCC, we deal with infringing materials, piracy and all the likes and just like these products, we are having here. “They are counterfeited and they are not fit for the end-users. What SON is doing today is a huge leap, that is the fight against counterfeit. “People that have worked hard invested heavily and laboured to put these goods in the market will not reap the benefits of their investment if SON allowed these substandard accessories into the markets. “So, what SON has done today has contributed immensely to the growth of the Gross Domestic Products (GDP) of Nigeria economy,” he said. © 2020, maritimemag. All rights reserved.
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