'Black market profiteers' should be dealt with under emergency laws, MP urges

People buying up vast quantities of groceries and hand sanitiser to sell at an inflated price have been branded as “predatory, vicious and uncaring” by a Yorkshire MP.

Alexander Stafford, Conservative MP for Rother Valley, has today written to to Prime Minister calling for emergency laws to deal with the “black market profiteers”.

In some areas hand sanitiser usually priced at just a couple of pounds has been advertised as for sale for more than £20.

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And Mr Stafford said mothers in his constituency had been forced to go without supplies for their babies.

24.99 bottles of Carex hand gel on sale at Hampden Square Pharmacy in north London. Photo: @JohnStealer/PA Wire24.99 bottles of Carex hand gel on sale at Hampden Square Pharmacy in north London. Photo: @JohnStealer/PA Wire
24.99 bottles of Carex hand gel on sale at Hampden Square Pharmacy in north London. Photo: @JohnStealer/PA Wire

Prices have been inflated both at retailers and also through individuals selling hoarded products online.

Mr Stafford said: “My residents and I have been concerned to see and hear stories of mothers unable to find powdered milk for their new-borns, the elderly unable to find packs of toilet roll, the vulnerable unable to find hand sanitiser and gels, and fathers unable to buy baby thermometers for their children.

“All the while, some have been hoarding supplies of these products, with the aim to sell them on at an inflated price, profiteering from the vulnerable and law-abiding citizens at this time of national crisis.

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“Such behaviour is not reflective of business acumen; it is predatory, vicious and uncaring.

“These black-market profiteers need to be stamped out and shown that their actions are not only hurting innocent people, but also go against everything that Britain stands for.”

In a letter to Boris Johnson he asked for new emergency powers to crackdown on those who were profiteering.

Yesterday a pharmacy owner said he would stop selling hand sanitiser due to bad publicity over inflated prices.

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Bharat Patel, owner of Sandylight Limited - which runs three pharmacies in London, blamed suppliers for increasing costs after posts on social media criticised the price of sanitiser prices at his shop.

Mr Patel's pharmacy was selling a 100ml bottle of the gel for £7.99, but he says his suppliers had sold him the bottles for £5.90 each.

The cost of the gel at his Sandylight Pharmacy in Chalk Farm, north London, was one of several highlighted on social media, with some reporting other stores selling bottles for as much as £24.99.

"I'm going to stop selling them because this is earning bad publicity for me and it's just not worth the hassle," the 55-year-old said.

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"It's the manufacturers. I used to sell two of these gels for 99p.

"I've been in the practice for 35 years, I've never seen times like this. Vulnerable people can't get the gel."

Mr Patel claimed his suppliers cited importing costs for high pricing because stocks of the product are not available in the UK.

Chris Atkins tweeted a photo of the hand sanitiser cost at Sandylight Pharmacy and said he saw people "in tears" about it when he visited on Monday.

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"There were people there in tears going through the coins in their purse," the 43-year-old said.

"We know hand sanitiser is going to save lives. To do that to elderly people who we all know are at the most risk... it's like war profiting.

"The people in the Second World War who were selling stuff on the side while people were starving, it's no different to that."

Mr Atkins, a filmmaker and journalist, said he was "so angry" about the price but decided to buy the product to share a picture of the receipt on Twitter to "shame" the pharmacy.

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John Stealer, a 57-year-old taxi driver, pictured a larger family-size bottle of sanitiser being sold at Hampden Square Pharmacy in north London for £24.95.

"I asked the shop assistant the price of the sanitiser prior to the crisis but she was evasive," Mr Stealer said.

"The pharmacist then intervened and blamed the supplier for the price hike."

The National Pharmacy Association said pharmacies were facing fluctuating wholesale prices on medicines and other supplies like hygiene products.

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As a result, a spokesman said, "sometimes they have no option other than to pass this on to customers".

"We are confident that the vast majority of our members across the UK are acting responsibly and professionally in the support they are giving to patients and customers.”

He added: "It's important that neither manufacturers, wholesalers or pharmacists breach good faith with their customers by introducing unjustifiable mark-ups on prices."

On Sunday the Financial Times reported that stocks of a key ingredient in making hand sanitisers, isopropyl alcohol, or IPA, are running low and prices for the chemical more than doubled in just two weeks.

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The paper reported that the UK has no facilities to make IPA and many independent distributors were sold out of it.

A spokesperson for Shell said: "We are keeping in very regular contact with our suppliers and customers and are increasing the production of isopropyl alcohol where possible."

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