Business
Fake Products: Reps Assure On SON Empowerment Bill
The House of Representa
tives has said the bill to empower the Standards Organisation of Nigeria (SON) to punish dealers in fake products would soon be passed into law.
The Chairman, House Committee on Commerce and Industry, Rep. Mohammed Onawo, who said this in Abuja, noted that the bill would be ready before the end of October.
The committee chairman spoke when he led other members on an oversight function to the organisation.
He said the bill, which had been laid before the House, would give more powers to the organisation to arrest and prosecute anyone involved in fake products in the country.
The chairman described as grossly unacceptable the release of only 26 per cent of the capital budget to the organisation in September.
He said the committee would do everything possible to address the situation with the support of his colleagues.
Onawo, while commending the management of SON for the fight against substandard products in the country, urged it to focus more on cement, fuel and generating sets, among others.
He said: “We commend your efforts in spite all the challenges, but we would like SON to do more into the quality of cement being sold in the country.
“The same thing we will like to do with fuel, because we all know that adulterated fuel has made many people to lose their families”, he said.
The chairman also urged the SON to extend its activities beyond the shores of Nigeria, to achieve better results in the war against fake and substandard products.
Earlier, the Director-General of SON, Dr Joseph Odumodu, said that out of N54 million capital budget earmarked for the year, only N14 million had been received, while the agency generated N1 billion.
He thanked the committee for promising to pass the bill.
The director-general, while soliciting more support of the House, said “we do not have a metrology laboratory in Nigeria that ensures that measurement is the same.
“If one makes a mistake, it could be very dangerous. There are sub-standard products everywhere in the world, but here in Nigeria, it creates certain inconsistencies. “But we are starting a journey that would put Nigeria on the map of the world as anything accepted in Nigeria would be accepted anywhere in the world”, he said.
He said the organisation introduced an accreditation system for manufacturers to go through certain processes and until their products were certified, they would not be allowed into the Nigerian market.