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Bangkok Post
Bangkok Post
National
SUTHIWIT CHAYUTWORAKAN

Seller of Lyn diet drugs arrested after four deaths

Weight loss products under the Lyn brand seized by police during the crackdown on illegal and unsafe food supplements and cosmetics.(Photo: Suthiwit Chayutworakan)

SAMUT PRAKAN: A seller of popular weight loss drugs under the brand name "Lyn" has been charged with selling products that contain dangerous chemicals and believed to have killed four customers.

The arrest of Chirayut Khongwatthanukun at his house in Bang Phli district on Sunday is the latest in a string of crackdowns on cosmetics and food supplements - most recently Marry Peaw and Magic Skin - which authorities say are are unlicensed and substandard.

A police search of the premises found a large amount of Lyn products packed in black and white boxes he had bought for sale.

An inspection found detoxification medicines in the black boxes and diet pills in the white ones, labeled as "Block and Burn".

Deputy national police chief Wirachai Songmetta, who led Sunday's operation, earlier warned people against buying Lyn products after Chon Buri health officials found they contain Bisacodyl and Sibutramine, which are listed as dangerous substances and banned since 1977, Naewna Newspaper reported.   

Sibutramine is an appetite suppressant while Bisadodyl is a type of laxative. They both can cause severe side effects, especially on heart and blood veins.

An initial investigation found four customers who used the products had died since early March. One of them was a Bangkok resident.

Mr Chirayut said he sold the drugs on the Internet after he had tried them and found they did reduce his weight. He said he did not know they were harmful to health.

The 45-year-old told police he bought 500 Lyn products from a "sales agent" and had sold them to 350 customers.

According to investigators the supplier was Phimphat Ekakkharin, who runs Ekakkharin Co.

Rangsan Wongunnak, a Samut Prakan public health official, said officials also found the product labels carry exaggerated claims.

Another food supplement, Marry Peaw, has recently been blacklisted after the Food and Drug Administration found the owner made them without FDA licences.

The size of the scandal is emerging as police question dozens celebrities hired to advertise cosmetics and food supplements under the Magic Skin brand.

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