
KAMPALA – Uganda National Bureau of Standards (UNBS) has on August 26 directed manufacturers of alcohol and spirits to recall all alcohol sachets and bottles below 200mls from the market.
The move is aimed at strengthening the ban on packaging and selling alcohol in sachets and bottles below 200mls.
In 2017, the government through a cabinet directive issued a ban of the aforementioned products, urging manufacturers to transit to packaging alcohol in plastic and glass bottles of 200mls minimum.
“Alcohol sachets and bottles below 200mls were expected to be out of the market by 30th May 2019, and as such, UNBS recently sealed off and closed over 167 sachet-filling machines belonging to at least 37 alcohol-manufacturing companies in Kampala, Wakiso, Mukono, Jinja and Mityana. Packaging materials used in production of sachets were also seized and confined,”.
However, the products are still sneaked onto the market, an illegal act that the UNBS Principle Certification Officer, Mr Ronald Ahimibisibwe warned the manufacturers against.
According to the UNBS Principal Surveillance Officer, Mr Linda Kobere, the resolutions were made to have non-conformities off the market which include;
“UNBS to urge manufacturers to recall all non-conforming products from the market, to seal off any company whose non-conforming product is found on the market, to name and shame any company sealed off due to non-conformities and to urge manufacturers to advocate for self-regulation,” reads a statement on the UNBS website.
Mr Kobere made the revelation during an UNBS engagement on Wednesday 21 with alcohol and spirits manufacturers on at the UNBS headquarters in Bweyogerere.
The Acting Deputy Executive Director in charge of compliance, Andrew Othieno also clarified that local manufacturers importing raw materials, machinery and spare parts do not have to undergo PVoC, but ship the items to Uganda and obtain import clearance. This is aimed at supporting local manufacturers grow.
He further urged the manufacturers to get the Quality mark (Q) because it is mandatory and eases product penetration into the East African Market.