Fake Viagra And Cialis Impounded In London
Written by Stuart Stevens | Monday, 06 August 2007 | There are 0 comments
A massive drugs bust in London has netted around a third of a million pounds worth of fake Viagra and Cialis. The United Kingdom Medicines and Healthcare Regulatory Agency [MHRA] announced that they had raided a London warehouse which contained the stash of illegally made erectile dysfunction medication.

It is likely that these counterfeit impotence drugs had been manufactured somewhere in the Far East and had been smuggled into the United Kingdom by criminals hoping to make a fast buck. The fake version of Viagra was called Kamagra and the fake version of Cialis went by the name of Apcalis.
The MHRA issued a statement warning the public of the dangers of taking these counterfeit medications. They also warned that these medicines would be at best just a waste of money but in a worst case scenario could be very harmful for your sexual health and otherwise. Despite a number of successes in clamping down on the importation of fake erectile dysfunction medication into the United Kingdom, the MHRA is still struggling to cope with the vast amount of criminals who are still trying to import fake Viagra, Cialis and Levitra into the UK. Viagra and Cialis are considered by experts to be among the most copied and plagiarised drugs in the world today.
The MHRA also warned people that they must be sure that the drugs that they were buying online were firstly genuine, secondly that they came with a prescription from a doctor and thirdly that the pharmacy that they came from was based in the United Kingdom. All these things can be confirmed on the Ukmedix web site using the special Pharmacheck system to guarantee the authenticity of the medications.
Ukmedix News wishes the MHRA the best of luck in their endeavours to catch the manufacturers and importers of these illegal and dangerous erectile dysfunction drugs.


