FCCPC Cracks Down on Fake Foreign Rice in Abuja Market

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The Federal Competition and Consumer Protection Commission (FCCPC) has intensified its efforts to protect Nigerian consumers by launching a decisive enforcement operation at Utako Market in Abuja. On Tuesday, April 15, 2025, officials from the commission stormed the market to dismantle a widespread scheme involving the deceptive rebagging and sale of locally produced rice as premium foreign brands.

Led by Boladale Adeyinka, Director of Surveillance and Investigation at FCCPC, the raid followed a series of complaints from residents and brand owners about fraudulent rice packaging and branding practices. These deceptive activities, the FCCPC revealed, have been carried out by some rice traders who repackage Nigerian rice to mimic long-discontinued foreign brands such as Royal Stallion and Mama Gold, thereby misleading consumers into paying inflated prices.

Adeyinka addressed the media at the scene, confirming that the FCCPC had received credible intelligence regarding the reappearance of brands that have been off Nigerian shelves for nearly a decade. “We received actionable information that some market operators are reintroducing brands like Royal Stallion into circulation despite their official withdrawal from the Nigerian market years ago,” she stated. “What they are doing is taking locally milled rice, packaging it in branded bags of well-known imported rice, and selling it to unsuspecting consumers at higher prices.”

According to the FCCPC, the high demand for foreign rice continues to influence market behavior, creating a fertile ground for dishonest traders to exploit consumer preferences. The ongoing scarcity and price volatility in the rice market have made it easier for counterfeiters to push off local rice as imported, banking on brand recognition to drive sales.

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During the enforcement sweep, several shops in Utako Market were sealed, and large quantities of fraudulently labeled rice were confiscated. The commission also cautioned traders against participating in such illicit practices, emphasizing that rebagging and misrepresentation of products is not only unethical but a criminal offense under Nigeria’s consumer protection laws.

“This is outright deception,” Adeyinka stressed. “These traders are not just cheating consumers financially; they are eroding trust in the food supply chain. Nigerians deserve to know exactly what they are buying and to get value for their money.”

The FCCPC noted that this raid is just one part of a broader crackdown on unfair trade practices across the country. The commission has pledged to increase market surveillance and continue carrying out similar operations in other regions to ensure compliance with product labeling standards and to uphold consumer rights.

“Our mission is to ensure transparency, honesty, and fairness in Nigeria’s markets,” Adeyinka concluded. “We will not relent in our duty to protect consumers from deceptive business practices and safeguard the integrity of the market.”

The operation underscores the FCCPC’s ongoing commitment to its mandate and sends a strong warning to dishonest traders that the era of unregulated deception in the Nigerian marketplace is drawing to a close.

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