US 'notorious markets' report warns of risks from online pharmacies
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[January 09, 2025]
By ELAINE KURTENBACH
BANGKOK (AP) — Nearly all of the world’s 35,000 online pharmacies are
being run illegally and consumers who use them risk getting ineffective
or dangerous drugs, according to the U.S. Trade Representative’s annual
report on “ notorious markets.” The report also singled out 19 countries
over concerns about counterfeit or pirated products.
The report also named about three dozen online retailers, many of them
in China or elsewhere in Asia that it said are allegedly engaged in
selling counterfeit products or other illegal activities.
The report says 96% of online pharmacies were found to be violating the
law, many operating without a license and selling medicines without
prescriptions and safety warnings.
Their websites often look like legitimate e-commerce platforms, often
with false claims that they are approved by the Food and Drug
Administration, said the report, released Wednesday. The FDA and U.S.
Drug Enforcement Administration have both issued warnings about risks of
buying prescription medicines from such sources.
It cited a survey by the Alliance for Safe Online Pharmacies’ Global
Foundation that found nearly one in four Americans who have used online
pharmacies reported having encountered substandard, fake or harmful
medicines.
Last year, Federal prosecutors reported that a network of illegal drug
sellers based in the U.S., the Dominican Republic and India had packaged
potentially deadly synthetic opioids into pills disguised as common
prescription drugs and sold millions of them through fake online
drugstores, federal prosecutors said Monday. At least nine people died
of narcotics poisoning between August 2023 and June 2024 after consuming
the counterfeit pills, the indictment said.
Apart from the risks of using drugs that may contain inert ingredients
or those that could cause allergies, the medicines are sometimes made in
unsanitary conditions, said the report, which did not give annual
statistics for those who may have died or otherwise been harmed.
The USTR’s annual report cited examples from inside the United States,
but and also mentioned risks of imported ingredients including fentanyl
from China. Many of the illicit online pharmacies are based outside the
U.S.
The “Notorious Markets List” did laud progress in fighting counterfeit
and pirated goods.
In one case, U.S. authorities, industry groups and the police
collaborated in shutting down a Hanoi, Vietnam-based piracy ring,
Fmovies, and other related piracy sites, in July and August.
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Workers prepare to destroy over 50 tons of confiscated fake medicine
during a campaign to mark World Consumer Rights Day in Beijing,
Thursday March 15, 2012. (AP Photo/File)
The report said the world’s
then-largest pirated movies site had drawn more than 6.7 billion
visits from January 2023 to June 2024.
In another Vietnam-linked case, two people operating pirate
television platform BestBuyIPTV were convicted and ordered to pay
fines and forfeit property.
The report also cited crackdowns on online piracy in Brazil and the
United Kingdom and busts of sellers of counterfeit purses, clothing
and shoes in Kuwait.
But problems remain with cyberlockers that thwart efforts to
restrict piracy of movies and other content and of so-called
“bulletproof” internet service providers, or ISPs, that promise
people using them leeway for using pirate sites, it said.
One such ISP is Avito, a Russian-based ad platform that allegedly
lets sellers advertise counterfeit products.
Baidu Wangpan, a cloud storage service of China’s largest search
engine provider, Baidu, was named for allegedly failing to enforce
or being slow to act on copyright protection.
The report also pointed to social-commerce site Pinduoduo and to
Douyin Mall, a Chinese online platform owned by Tiktok owner
ByteDance. It said the shopping platforms have sought to build up
protections but that they still host many counterfeit goods.
It also named Shopee, a Singapore-based online and mobile e-commerce
site, saying some country-focused platforms serving Southeast Asia
and South American had better track records in fighting piracy than
others.
IndiaMART, an big business-to-business marketplace in India, still
offers a slew of counterfeit products, it said.
While a large share of theft of intellectual property has moved
online, the report also highlighted real world locations notorious
for selling counterfeit products, including markets in Turkey,
bazaars in the United Arab Emirates and Saigon Square Shopping Mall
in Vietnam’s Ho Chi Minh City.
The report said Bangkok’s MBK Center, a huge mall of about 2,000
stores, had actively cracked down on counterfeiting, though such
products still can be found there.
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