Two Chinese Arrested In Lagos For Selling Fake Tyre Worths Of N5Billion
Two Chinese nationals, Taolung Shen and Xu Jing Yau, are now telling the police in Lagos all they know about the over N5billion sub-standard tyre stuffing business which they have been running in the country.
The
two Asians were paraded before journalists yesterday following their
arrest, and the sealing of the warehouse where they had been cloning
different sizes of tyres under such brand names as Powertrac, Aptany,
Harmony, Duraturn, Bearway, City Tour, Winda, Glory, Chachland, City
Grand and Grandsonte (tyre type) And Sunny (for tricycles), among
others.
Much of the tyres arrived Nigeria with
tyres stuffed into one another, sometimes as much as five stuffed in
one, and had been bent and ruptured on several portions and looking weak
and slack.
But the Chinese adorned the tyres with new labels and shinny linings to create impression of being new and healthy.
The Standards Organisation of Nigeria
(SON) Director-General and Chief Executive, Osita Aboloma, who conducted
journalists round the warehouse, described the tyres as dead on
arrival, adding that allowing such consignments sale amounted to
surreptitiously taking away the lives of millions of Nigerians.
He said stuffing tyres through the long
sea journey from China to Lagos had already compromised the quality, not
to talk of the crude way the tyres were separated on arrival in Nigeria
and the poor storage facility, without sufficient aeration, in the
warehouse, saying that his agency would not tolerate such.
“SON intercepted one of their trucks on
the highway, tracked it and then this. You can see the amount of danger
that these people are posing to our people and our economy just because
they want to make huge profit at the expense of the lives of Nigerians,”
Aboloma said.
He said getting to the premises of the
company revealed a lot of illicit activities, including re-labelling,
high level of stuffing of several tyres into one, tampering with expiry
dates and storing the tyres in very adverse conditions.
“It is a clear case of investing millions
in illicit business in order to take away the lives of millions of
Nigerians. To destroy the lives of millions of Nigerians. If we should
allow something like this, it will amount to killing Nigerians,” Aboloma
said.
He showed tyres in the January as
manufactured date of manufacture, but that were already in the country
as at the time of the seizure, despite that it would take months for
shipments from China to arrive Nigeria, saying such anticipatory dating
had criminal intentions.
“I want to reiterate that there is no
hiding place for those who deal in substandard products as they would be
caught and their products confiscated. Today’s is an example,” he said.
As much as five tyres were stuffed into
one, with many of them already squeezed and weakened, though looking
new, and the possibility that once in circulation, consumers would
ignorantly take their outward neat look to mean they are healthy.
“Nothing can be recouped from such
stuffed tyres, no need to test anything because the tyres have already
been destroyed on arrival, ” he said
Aboloma thanked SON Directorate of Compliance for discovering the warehouse and other meaningful Nigerians for volunteering
information to the agency, saying that those arrested in connection
with the latest deal would be tried in line with the new SON act and if
found guilty jailed.
He said his agency was exploring all
avenues towards nipping acts like these in the bud, and would as a
matter of need, intensify activities towards market surveillance,
inter-agency collaboration, as well as public sensitisation and consumer
awareness.
“For us, it is a continuous fight.
Currently, we are prosecuting about five cases in different high courts
in line with the mandate of the SON, we burn sub-standard products when
there is need to, following laid down procedures in all of these,” he
said.
Aboloma advised users of automobile tyres nationwide on the need to be extra cautious when making purchases of such products.
He disclosed that the agency has
uncovered a dangerous trend by some tyre importers and dealers tampering
with the date of manufacture to deceive consumers.
The SON boss disclosed that dates of
manufacture on tyres were being altered to deceive consumers that the
tyres have longer life span with a view to making excessive profits,
thereby putting the lives of users in danger.
He advised Nigerians to pay greater
attention to the inscription of dates of manufacture on tyres to be able
to discover those that may have been altered and
report such to SON promptly. The dates according to him are usually in
four numerical digits indicating month and year of manufacture.
He advised tyre users to henceforth
demand that dealers indicate the dates of manufacture of the tyres on
receipts whenever they are making purchases to make them liable for
whatever they sell and further promote consumer protection.
According to him, technically,
stuffing unnecessarily expands the tyres or unduly compresses them, bend
the wires round the tyre helms, and create sharp points, making them
vulnerable to bursts on slight contacts, saying this should not be
encouraged. Responding to the question of what the federal government
was doing concerning Asian countries where much of the substandard
products come from, he said the matter was being handled at the highest
diplomatic level, expressing the optimism that the desired result would
be got at the end of the day.
Aboloma promised to ensure the
prosecution of all those found to be involved in the nefarious activity
in the interest of the populace and to serve as deterrent to other
unscrupulous importers, adulterators and distributors of substandard
products generally.
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