Group Confirms Sale of Mercury-Contaminated Skin Whiteners in QC (Councilors Right in Pushing for Punitive Action to Stop Illegal Trade Says Group)
The EcoWaste Coalition, a non-profit watch group tracking
toxic chemicals, products and wastes, confirmed the unabated sale of banned
mercury-laden skin whitening cosmetics in Quezon City justifying a proposed
ordinance that will put an end to such illegal trade.
At the hearing of the Quezon City Council’s Committee of
Trade, Commerce and Industry this morning, the group informed the councilors led by committee chair
District IV Councilor Irene Belmonte that contraband skin whitening products
with mercury impurities are being
offered for sale despite being banned by the Food and Drug Administration
(FDA).
The group had earlier conducted test buys to mark the
first anniversary of the entry into force of the Minamata Convention of Mercury
that aims to, among other provisions, phase out mercury use in an array of
products, including skin lightening creams and soaps, to protect public health
and the environment.
“To prove our point, we went around QC last Monday and
managed to buy proscribed products for P100 to P250 each that are often sold
over the counter and with receipts provided.
The proposed ordinance banning and penalizing such unlawful trade is
strongly justified,” stated Thony Dizon, Chemical Safety Campaigner, EcoWaste
Coalition.
The banned products, according to Dizon, were obtained
from stores selling cosmetics, herbal supplements, and Chinese medicines at the
Araneta Center in Cubao, Ever Gotesco Mall and Commonwealth Market along
Commonwealth Avenue, and a retail outlet at Barangay Damayan.
Dizon presented to the councilors the purchased skin
whitening cosmetics, including two variants of Jiaoli, two types of S’Zitang,
and one sample each of Erna, Goree and Yu Dan Tang – all of which are not
registered with the FDA and banned for containing mercury above the trace
amount limit of one part per million (ppm).
As per analysis by the group using a handheld X-Ray
Fluorescence (XRF) device, the products bought are contaminated with elevated
concentrations of mercury in the range of 583 to 42,000 ppm.
Mercury is a highly toxic substance with no known level
of exposure that is considered safe, the EcoWaste Coalition emphasized, adding
that fetuses, babies, children, and pregnant women are most susceptible to the
health effects of mercury.
The Committee on Trade, Commerce and Industry unanimously approved today the
Proposed Ordinance 20CC-439 entitled “An Ordinance Banning the Manufacture,
Distribution, and Sale of Mercury-Containing Skin Whitening Cosmetics in Quezon
City,” which the Committee on Health and Sanitation had earlier approved last
August 14.
The said measure is co-introduced by Councilors Elizabeth Delartmente, Diorella
Maria Sotto-Antonio, Irene Belmonte, Kate Abigael Galang- Coseteng, Alexis
Herrera, Lena Marie Juico, Eufemio Lagumbay, Eric Medina and Marivic Co-Pilar.
“As a group espousing a zero waste and toxics-free
society, we deem it very important for national and local measures to be
enacted and enforced that will reduce mercury releases to the environment. Getting rid of mercury-added products such as
skin whitening creams, for instance, is a good way to cut mercury releases to
air, water and soil and thus protect human health,” Dizon said.
-end-
Reference:
http://www.mercuryconvention.org/
http://www.who.int/ipcs/assessment/public_health/mercury_flyer.pdf
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