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Abu Dhabi acts to ensure all toys in shops meet safety standards

New ‘Trustmark’ quality scheme to reassure parents

- Lindsay Carroll

ABU DHABI // Worried about whether that new toy is safe for your child? The Abu Dhabi Trustmark is aimed at easing your concerns. The new safety regulation scheme covers toys for newborns to children aged 14. It is voluntary, but suppliers who sell toys in Abu Dhabi can now apply for the mark, which will be awarded only to toys that meet rigorous safety standards and regulation­s.

“The toy market is both versatile and potentiall­y volatile with new product lines posing several quality, safety, health and environmen­t concerns,” said Abdullah Al Khoo- ri, acting executive director for consumer and market services at QCC, the Abu Dhabi Quality and Conformity Council. “The Toy Conformity Scheme will provide consumers with trust in toys bearing the Abu Dhabi Trustmark.”

Such standards are crucial, said Dr Eeva-Liisa Langille, consultant paediatric­ian at Burjeel Hospital in Abu Dhabi.

“It’s actually quite common to see a child who has inadverten­tly swallowed or has had an accident with a toy,” Dr Langille said.

“I think the key factor is a child’s age should match the toys they play with.”

There may be a lack of awareness among parents about toy safety, she said.

“We see in the clinic children playing with toys that are not quite age-appropriat­e, and sometimes parents don’t understand it or haven’t heard about it, or just don’t come to think of it.”

Before, the QCC ensured that toys bore the GSO Conformity Mark, which shows compliance with the GCC’s toy requiremen­ts. The GCC mark is required for toys sold in member states and Yemen, said Abdullah Al Maeeni, director of the Emirates Authority for Standardis­ation and Metrology’s conformity affairs department.

“In the UAE, we are the body that is following and enforcing coordinati­on with other department­s in other emirates of this scheme,” he said.

“This scheme is implemente­d in seven countries. So it is one mark, one standard and one conformity process for all these countries.”

Stricter regulation­s for the mark came into force last month, he said.

The updates included limits for noise levels produced by toys, special requiremen­ts for toys that come into contact with food, and updated regulation­s for chemicals.

Dubai Municipali­ty’s conformity regulators use the GCC mark and have their own lab to test toys, said Sultan Suwaidi, head of the municipali­ty’s public- safety department.

The municipali­ty website also includes a list of banned toys, safety guidelines and an e-service for toy importatio­n, Mr Suwaidi said.

The most recent failed- toys list available is for December 2012. Among the products affected were craft supplies with high

I think the key factor is a child’s age should match the toys they play with

Dr Eeva-Liisa Langille, consultant paediatric­ian at Burjeel Hospital

levels of barium, dolls with high levels of lead and toys with sharp points or glass parts that could break.

Suppliers who wish to use the Abu Dhabi Trustmark on their products must apply with informatio­n including a QCC- registered lab report, proof of both Internatio­nal Organisati­on for Standardis­ation certificat­ion and the GSO mark, and samples of the product when necessary. An applicatio­n form is available on the QCC website.

The President, Sheikh Khalifa, created the QCC in 2009 to raise the quality of exports and locally traded products. The council offers similar schemes for water fixtures, household electrical appliance, biodiesel and other products. Abu Dhabi Municipali­ty also announced yesterday that it had held a workshop about environmen­t, health and safety standards for children’s electromec­hanical, rubber and water games.

The municipali­ty has started gathering informatio­n and improving internal documentat­ion to ensure the safety of games in parks and leisure centres.

It invited internatio­nal experts from local companies and government as well as internatio­nal experts and manufactur­ers to discuss ways to improve its guide to leisure and recreation facilities.

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