BEIJING -- China's national drug watchdog has revoked Anhui Huayuan Worldbest 
Biology Pharmacy Co.'s production license for injections and dismissed the 
company's top management. 
The manufacture of "Xinfu" drugs, which allegedly caused six deaths in the 
country in July, is banned, spokesman Zhang Jixiang with the State Food and Drug 
Administration said here on Monday. 
He said that the "Xinfu" antibiotic injection was of inferior quality. The 
company's Good Manufacturing Practice Certificate and its production license for 
"Xinfu" drugs have been revoked. 
The Anhui Provincial Food and Drug Bureau will supervise the destruction of 
all the recalled drugs. 
The bureau will seize illegal company funds and impose a fine in line with 
China's Drug Management Law, Zhang said. 
Five management staff including general manager Qiu Zuyi, executive deputy 
general manager Zhou Cang, deputy general manager Pan Wei, Plant II director 
Yuan Haiyuan and quality supervisor Cui Tongxin were dismissed for their 
responsibility in respect to the suspect killer antibiotic. 
Another five people including legal representative Sun Ying, production 
director Liu Jiansong, Plant II vice directors Jia Yibo and Wang Dianlin and 
technician Chen Ping each were given a "serious demerit", Zhang said. 
Director Zhang Guodong and vice director Shang Wenxue of the Food and Drug 
Bureau of Fuyang City received administrative sanctions. 
Zhang said that the "Xinfu" incident had unveiled "glaring problems" among 
China's drug manufacturers and "deficient supervision" by drug authorities. 
"Companies should think very seriously about this catastrophe, run their 
business honestly and stick to the law," Zhang said. 
He urged local drug watchdogs to ferret out supervision loopholes and make a 
list of companies that require special surveillance. 
The national drug watchdog strongly recommended that local authorities adopt 
the practice of making sudden unannounced inspections, intended to catch 
problematic companies red-handed. 
At the end of September, the administration had carried out 35 unannounced 
inspections of drug manufacturers. As a result, fifteen companies have had their 
Good Manufacturing Practice (GMP) Certificates revoked and another 13 were 
ordered to rectify production defects. 
The issuance of GMP certificates to seven other drug producers was postponed, 
Zhang said. 
He said that all new drugs must receive on-the-spot inspection before being 
marketed. "Investigators will go to plants to see laboratory tests at first 
hand, inspect clinical records, sample products and make sure they are 
consistent with the materials that figure in the application, " Zhang said. 
"Falsification will be severely punished in line with the law," he warned. 
The administration also tightened up technology criteria concerning the 
production of risky medicines, particularly injections, to better defend the 
lives and interests of patients, he said.