This is another extract from the Mail & Guardian, Johanesburg, South Africa. September 3rd-9th 1999
 
Another burning issue in South Africa apart from the "Trade Union Strikes" and the "All African Games" is the Booming business of illegal sale of skin-lightening creams containing a chemical agent which eventually disfigures the consumers.
 
Consignments of the cosmetics creams manufactured in the United Kingdom are pouring into African countries.
 
In South Africa, where there are strict controls on the sale of the bleaching active agent used in the product-Hdroquinone-doctors have been horrified to find the British made products on open sale in pharmacies and supermarket chains.
 
A Mail & guradina investigation in conjunction with The Observer in London has established that some of the creams from Britain contain far higher percentages of hydroquinone than is legally permitted in South Africa as well as the European Union.
 
The products also have misleading claims that they incorporate a sun-screening agent  on their packaging. Hydorquinone inhibits the production of the skin pigment melanim and is particularly damaging in combination with the sun's rays.
 
South Africa's Medicines control Council is trying to hunt dowm the importers and says there is evidence that the products are being smuggled into South Africa via francophone countries.
 
Manchester based Nish Cosmetics, which makes three of the most popular skin lightening creams in Africa-Jaribu, Mekako and Amira-said it kept strictly to European Union regulations, which alow only 2% hydroquinone, both Amira and Jaribu contained nearly twice that amount.
 
The creams also claimed to contain"special sun-screening agent allantoin". Allantoin is a soothing agent commonly used in cosmetics, but has no sun-screening qualities.
 
A fourth product, Rico Complexion Cream, made by Rico Skin Care in EGham, Surrey, contained more than the permitted levels of hydroquinone.
Naomi Pule a representative for the South African Medicines Control Council, said none of the products were licensed.
 
Steve Dunning, Manager of Nish Cosmetics, said his company exported " container loads" of skin-lightening creams, although he could not give precise figures.
 
He said 99% of exports were to Kenya, where a local compnay distributed the creams to the rest of the continent.
 
Dunning said Nish Cosmetices restricted levels of hydroquinone to 1%. "It just about works at that," he said. He added that he knew these products were not legal in South Africa, but said counterfeit products were sometimes available.
 
" We are aware that our products have been counterfeited, possibly over here (the UK). The police have been informed."
 
A second British company, Anglo Fabrics Ltd of Bolton, a name found on Jaribu and Mekako packing in South Africa, said it had recently sold its distribution rights to Excom, a company based in Dubai.
 
British dermatologist Sujata Jully is campaigning for a total ban on skin lighteners in the European Union.
 
The proportion doesn't matter. It is the . It is the accumulation that causes the problems, "she says. Whne you orignally put it on it seems to work, but it has the reverse effect in the sun, so the person uses more.
 
" The skin breaks open and it penetrates into the bloodstrems, the kidneys and liver. The disfigurements tht we see are quite horrible.
The across the counter sale of skin lightening creams containing hydroquinone was outlawed in SOuth Africa in 1992. Regualtions were introduced requiring creams containing up to 2% hydroquinone to be registered and soal only throught pharmacies. Higher concentrations could only be sola on prescription.
Dr. Hilary Carman, a South African Dermatologist involved in the 1992 campaign to control the use of hydroquinone, described the British exports as "immoral".
 
"It is another example of the exploitation of the Third World by the First World,"she said.
"Like women the world over, Africans are buying a dream  and are being sold a lie".
she said the promis by manufactureres that their products made skins lighter was fraudulent."They in fact make them darker and disfigure them."
 
Carman believes there is a hugh trade in skin lighteners across Africa. Skin lightening creams used to contain mercury as the bleaching agent, even though mercury can damge the brain and tissues but preparations containing mercury are outlawed in South Africa many manufacturers replaced it with hydroquinone.
 
Professor George Findley at the University of Pretoria described how the chemical first bleaches the skins, but then coarsen it, creating black lumps which can develop into abscesses and ulcers.
 
These effects seem to be accellerated by exposure to the sun, making them particularly dangerous for Africa.
 
Research suggest that blacks resort to skin lightening creams because of racial prejudice.
Women using creams told pollsters in a survey carried out in the 1980s that they believed black skins were "inferior".
 
 
 
The Struggle Continues!!!
Ndey Jobarteh