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SON tasks electrical dealers on products quality

The Standards Organisation of Nigeria (SON), has tasked electrical dealers to uphold the highest quality standards for them to benefit from the African Continental Free Trade Agreement (AfCFTA).

The Director-General, SON, Farouk Salim, gave the advice at a sensitisation workshop for Electrical Dealers Association of Nigeria (EDAN), at the Alaba International Market, Lagos on Friday.

Salim said this is to ensure the market takes its rightful place as the largest market in West Africa and AfCFTA to attract customers globally.

He revealed the agency’s willingness to work with the association to ensure that the market is free from substandard goods.

“In order for the market to have a good reputation and to have more customers across the world especially with this open border policy in the AfCFTA, it is very important for you to police yourselves, find out those people with bad products and report them to us so that we can take them out of the market.

“So far, they have not given us a reason to doubt your commitment towards eradicating substandard goods. I commend the association for serving Nigerians with quality products, because if not for you, the country would have been dominated by foreign goods.

“Anybody here with certification or who has genuine products does not have a problem with SON,” he said.

The SON DG advised the association to always insist on quality products, warning that substandard electronics and electrical products were life endangering products capable of causing destruction.

“You are dealing with electronics and electrical products and these goods can cause fire explosions that would destroy lives and property and it is not discriminatory.

“Once you introduce a bad product into the market, you are exposing not just consumers to danger, but also your families. We are not here to spoil your business, so let us collaborate as we are going all over the country to take the gospel of standardisation nationwide.

“Let’s join hands to ensure no bad products are imported to Nigeria. We would not allow people to bring their problems down to the country and still get away with it,” he said.

In order for the market to have a good reputation and to have more customers across the world especially with this open border policy in the AfCFTA, it is very important for you to police yourselves, find out those people with bad products and report them to us so that we can take them out of the market.

Executive Chairman, EDAN, Fabian Ezeorjika, said to complement the efforts of SON, the market authority constituted an internal mechanism to checkmate those indulging in manufacturing, importation or exportation of sub-standard products.

He added that the association had also constituted an adhoc Standard and Anti-Adulteration Committees, vested with the responsibilities of standardising and regulating the quality of products in the electrical sector.

He assured that the association would continue to work with SON to arrest and punish defaulters according to its constitution and report them when necessary.

“We made it very clear during our inauguration in 2016 that we will continue to partner with governmental agencies to eradicate sub-standard products from the market.

“We shall uphold and implement government policies formulated to keep sub-standard products totally out of our markets,” he stated.

He also reiterated the association’s resolve to completely abide by the SON Act and regulations to complement the already existing cordial relationship between them.

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