Cough syrup deaths: Sreesan Pharma's licence revoked, firm shut down
The company’s owner, G Ranganathan, was recently arrested by a Special Investigation Team from Madhya Pradesh.
PTI

Chennai, 13 Oct
The manufacturing licence of Tamil Nadu based Sresan
Pharmaceutical company that allegedly produced the now banned adulterated cough
syrup Coldrif has completely been revoked, and the company has been ordered to
shut down, the state government said on Monday.
The state Drug Control Department officials had during an
inspection found the cough syrup contained 48.6 per cent of Diethylene Glycol
(DEG), a toxic substance. This medicine is linked to the death of children in
Madhya Pradesh.
The officials had also found that the company lacked proper
good manufacturing practices (GMP) and good laboratory practices (GLP), and
they recorded over 300 critical and major violations.
The company’s owner, G Ranganathan, was recently arrested by
a Special Investigation Team from Madhya Pradesh.
Earlier in the day, a team from the Enforcement Directorate
(ED) raided the premises of Sresan Pharmaceuticals and some officials, in a
Prevention of Money Laundering Act (PMLA) case.
"The drug manufacturing licence of Sresan
Pharmaceuticals has been completely cancelled, and the company has been closed.
Orders have been given to conduct a detailed inspection of other drug
manufacturing companies located in Tamil Nadu," the government said in a
release here.
At least 22 children from Madhya Pradesh, mostly residents
of Parasia in Chhindwara district, have died so far due to suspected renal
failure after consuming the banned Coldrif cough syrup.
Some other children are currently undergoing treatment athospitals in Nagpur in Maharashtra.
Many children from Chhindwara had been rushed to hospitals
in Nagpur for advanced health care, where they died of renal failure.
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