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Promoting extreme thinness will become a criminal offence punishable by a jail sentence under a government-backed law that was tabled yesterday in France to combat anorexia nervosa.
The world’s first use of the law to tackle eating disorders is broadly aimed at the media and fashion world, but especially at the websites and blogs of the so-called pro-ana movement. While many are support groups, others promote starvation as a “life-style choice”, with girls and young women posting their wasting images as “thinspiration” for others.
Social networking sites such as Facebook and MySpace have come under pressure in Britain and other countries recently to ban their pro-ana entries.
Last month a website that originated in France caused an outcry for encouraging children as young as 9 to embrace plastic surgery and extreme dieting in the search for the perfect figure. The Miss Bimbo site invites users to create a virtual doll, keep it “waif thin” with diet pills and buy it breast implants and facelifts. The website attracted 1.2 million players in France.
Fines of up to €30,000 (£24,000) and a two-year prison sentence will be imposed on offenders who “provoke a person to seek excessive thinness by encouraging prolonged restriction of nourishment” to the point of risking death or damage to health. The prison term is raised to three years with a €45,000 fine if the person dies.
Some experts and fashion leaders oppose the Bill, which is expected to be passed by Parliament within months. “You do not solve this kind of problem with the law but with understanding,” Jean-Paul Gaultier, the designer, said. Didier Grumbach, head of the French Couture Federation, said it was not up to the state to legislate on beauty and aesthetic criteria.
The law, modelled on legislation for abetting suicide, was tabled by Valérie Boyer, an MP from President Sarkozy’s Union for a Popular Movement. Roselyne Bachelot, the Health Minister, gave it the Government’s blessing at the unveiling of a code for the media, advertising and fashion industry on “promoting healthy body images” and fighting anorexia.
“The pro-ana movements which spread their messages of death on the web must be the target for special attention,” Mrs Bachelot said as she presented Mrs Boyer’s draft Bill along with the voluntary code. Up to 40,000 people suffer from anorexia in France, the great majority of them girls and young women.
The 48-year-old elder daughter of Jacques Chirac, the last President, has been incapacitated for two decades with the disease.
Mrs Bachelot said that the “waif-like, diaphanous, transparent bodies on the walls of our towns, in our magazines and on our computer screens are exerting their power of harmful fascination on our society”. Anorexia was one of the most lethal of mental disorders, killing 20 per cent of long-term sufferers, she said.
Mrs Boyer, who has two teenage daughters, said that the new offence was necessary because “it was not possible to deal with the pro-ana sites under the law against provoking suicide or promoting cults”. She added: “We do not know who is hiding behind these sites, but there is real mental manipulation.” Her law was also aimed at magazines, she said.
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Actually, Kris from Fife, this new legislation is in FRANCE.
Emily, Cambridge,
As well as the obvious implications for liberty, this seems to be about the current fashionable politics, rather than a general concern about health. Surely if the French want to ban promotion of an unhealthy body, what about those that go the opposite way; "feeder" and "fat acceptance" websites? Both obesity and starvation can kill and damage, with the former being a problem much larger in numbers in the Western world. Again I assert that this is nothing more than a trendy issue, with no genuine interest in public health behind it.
Richard Thrippleton, Cambridge,
As to the web
Most French websites are in the USA where their costs are 90% cheaper
How would a French court get a ound this
As a publisher of fashion websites, I cannot see it being enforceable, but as to the fact it might bar one from future fashion shows in France, it has to be acted on
Nicholas Iles, Oswestry, United Kingdom
More bizarre edicts.
Tom Taylor-Duxbury, Ludlow, UK
This is wholly improper oppression of liberty: adults must be free to decide how they interact with their own bodies themselves. One person's liberty should never be restricted because another might misuse that same liberty to her or his own detriment.
James E. Petts, Burnham, England
An interesting idea. I assume a similar law is being prepared for websites and magazines that promote being fat as well, or indeed simply downplay the dangers of being overweight given the severe and long term effects that come from obesity? It is very difficult to legislate on obesity, but it is the elephant in the room when it comes to public health.
Neil Anderson, Bridgetown, Barbados
We're becoming a police state.
kris, Fife, Great Britain