The Borneo Post

Ivory Coast bans skin whitening creams

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ABIDJAN: Ivory Coast has banned skin whitening creams, which are widely used in west Africa, because of fears they cause lasting damage to health, the health ministry said Wednesday.

“Cosmetic lightening and hygiene creams that de-pigment the skin are now forbidden,” the ministry said in a statement.

The ban affects whitening creams and lotions containing mercury and its derivative­s, cortisone, vitamin A or more than two percent hydroquini­ne, a lightening agent that is used to develop photograph­s.

“The number of people with side effects caused by these medicines is really high,” said Christian Doudouko, a member of Ivory Coast’s pharmaceut­ical authority, warning that they could cause skin cancer.

Lightening products can also lead to hypertensi­on and diabetes, said Elidje Ekra, a dermatolog­ist at the Treichvill­e university hospital in Abidjan.

Whitening creams have been popular for years among young African women, who see them as a way to make themselves more attractive.

The use of the creams is believed to be even more widespread in Nigeria.

Although there are no official figures of how many women use such products across Africa, billboards advertisin­g the potentiall­y deadly creams can be seen in cities across the continent.

“In our cultures, some people think women with light skin are the most beautiful. This beauty standard pushes many girls to depigment their skin,” Ekra said.

“What we see in the media is the lighter one’s skin is, the better one’s life,” he added, referring to advertisem­ents that fill the streets of Abidjan, Ivory Coast’s biggest city, showing models with lightertha­n-average skin.

While the craze is most widespread among women, some men use the creams too, Ekra said.

The creams are also extremely popular in many countries in Asia, including India, Pakistan and Japan, as well as in the Middle East. — AFP

 ??  ?? Protesters erect a barricade during demonstrat­ions in Burundi’s capital Bujumbura. — Reuters photo
Protesters erect a barricade during demonstrat­ions in Burundi’s capital Bujumbura. — Reuters photo

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