In an early morning raid yesterday, 150 officers descended on the Roxy neighbourhood in the country's economic capital, seizing boxes of fake medicine.
"I applaud the action that took place in the largest street drugs market in west Africa," Dr Parfait Kouassi, who heads an association of pharmaceutical retailers, told AFP.
Often improperly stored, the fake treatments are "toxic cocktails" whose low prices attract illiterate clients, Kouassi added.
He estimates that such "street pharmacies" cost the country's legal pharmaceutical sector 40 to 50 billion CFA francs (USD 66-million to USD 83-million) each year, including about five billion francs of lost revenue for the government.
"We are asking the government to help us reconvert. Many women make a living by selling these drugs, their primary activity," Sita Kone told AFP after her boutique was destroyed.
Two months ago, authorities burned 50 tonnes of fake drugs valued at more than a million euros.
Fake drugs make up around 10 percent of the global pharmaceutical market, according to the International Institute of Research Against Counterfeit Medicines.
In Africa, nearly one drug out of three is illicit or counterfeit, making the continent the world's most vulnerable region to trafficking run by organised crime rings.
But the drugs are responsible for hundreds of thousands of deaths worldwide, according to IRACM.
Most illicit pharmaceutical products come from India, sometimes authentic but often expired or sold as contraband, whereas most counterfeit drugs are manufactured in China, according to the World Customs Organisation.
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