The Borneo Post (Sabah)

Tonga PM challenges Pacific leaders to weightloss competitio­n

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WELLINGTON: The prime minister of Tonga has challenged fellow Pacific leaders to a yearlong weight-loss competitio­n to combat soaring obesity levels in the region.

The Pacific has the highest obesity rates in the world and Tonga leader Akilisi Pohiva said politician­s needed to lead from the front to help curb the problem.

“We should all get together for a weight-loss competitio­n, for an entire year,” he told the Samoa Observer in an interview published this week.

“So when we meet the following year we will weigh in again and see who has lost the most.

“It is not about who loses the most kilos but in order to shake off the weight, you must eat light and having that healthy mentality will go a long way.”

While Pohiva’s proposal was light-hearted, he said the issue of obesity was a serious problem for the region that led to noncommuni­cable diseases such as diabetes and heart disease.

According to World Health Organisati­on (WHO) data released in 2015, nine of the 10 most obese nations in the world are in the Pacific.

Official statistics show noncommuni­cable diseases account for about 75 per cent of all deaths in the area, and diabetes rates exceed 40 per cent in some island nations.

Islanders’ diets used to be dominated by fish, coconuts and fruit but are now heavily reliant on fatty imported meats, rice, and processed snack foods laden with sugar and fat.

People in the Pacific have also long viewed copious amounts of food as a sign of prosperity, leading to an attitude that bigger is better.

Pohiva, said the problems were well known and had been discussed extensivel­y — but it was time for Pacific leaders to act. — AFP

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