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                         British 
                          NRI's pharma firm-"Goldshield" under scanner 
                              
                        LONDON, Jan. 27, 2005 
                          IANS  
                         Britain's Serious Fraud Office (SFO) is stepping up 
                          inquiry into alleged trade malpractices by a pharmaceuticals 
                          company founded by a British Asian of Gujarati origin. 
                        The investigation concerns allegations of price-fixing 
                          by drug companies supplying to the National Health Service. 
                          The SFO has indicated it will interview company executives 
                          by the middle of the year. 
                        The SFO has been looking into allegations that companies, 
                          including manufacturer Goldshield, were involved in 
                          a cartel to inflate the prices of two popular drugs. 
                        Goldshield, which denies 
                          any wrongdoing, said that Ajit Patel, its founder and 
                          chief executive, and Kirti Patel, another executive 
                          director, "may be required to attend interviews 
                          some time between April and June".  
                        A spokesman for the SFO said: "We have been gathering 
                          information and examining evidential material, and we 
                          are now in a mature phase of the investigation where 
                          we can focus on how individuals may be able to help 
                          us." 
                        The Department of Health called in the SFO in 2002, 
                          alleging that six companies colluded to limit the supply 
                          and inflate the prices of penicillin-based antibiotics 
                          and the blood-thinner warfarin.  
                        In April 2002, in one of the biggest single operations 
                          carried out by SFO, more than 200 officers raided 11 
                          homes and 16 business addresses - including Ajit Patel's 
                          house and Goldshield's Croydon offices - seizing files 
                          and computer equipment. 
                        Six pharmaceutical companies involved in the raids 
                          were named by the SFO. They are Generics UK, a subsidiary 
                          of the German drugs giant Merck; Kent Pharmaceuticals; 
                          Regent-GM Laboratories; Goldshield Group; Norton Healthcare, 
                          a subsidiary of the Florida-based Ivax Corporation; 
                          and Ranbaxy (UK), a subsidiary of the Indian-based Ranbaxy 
                          Laboratories. 
                        Apart from the SFO investigation, the company and four 
                          other drug makers are being sued for 28 million pounds 
                          by the Department of Health. Along with three other 
                          firms, it also faces a 3 million pound lawsuit from 
                          the Scottish health authorities. 
                        The company said: "Goldshield and its executives 
                          do not believe that they have acted in an unlawful or 
                          improper manner."  
                        The company supplied warfarin to the NHS only in the 
                          period under investigation, 1997 to 2000. The SFO's 
                          case is believed to centre on alleged presentations 
                          to a secret meeting of drug makers. 
                        The company makes and supplies cheap pharmaceuticals 
                          and vitamins, and has cut costs heavily in the past 
                          three years by moving most of its operations to India. 
                         
                        
                          
                          
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