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EDITOR IN CHIEF- ABDULLAH BIN SALIM AL SHUEILI

Spain to ban ads for sweets targeting kids

List includes chocolate, sweets and energy bars as well as cakes, sweet biscuits, juices, ice cream and energy drinks.
List includes chocolate, sweets and energy bars as well as cakes, sweet biscuits, juices, ice cream and energy drinks.
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MADRID: Spain will ban advertising of unhealthy foods and drinks like chocolate, biscuits and ice cream aimed at children to help fight obesity in young people, the consumer affairs minister said on Thursday.


"Our children are very vulnerable to advertising and it is our obligation to protect them," Minister Alberto Garzon said on Twitter.


He said the regulation would ban the advertising of five categories of products to minors, regardless of their nutritional content.


That list includes chocolate, sweets and energy bars as well as cakes, sweet biscuits, juices, ice cream and energy drinks.


Other food products will also face regulation if they exceed certain limits for saturated fats, sugars and salt content.


Nine out of ten food advertisements targeted at children are for unhealthy products, according to consumer association OCU.


The move, which still needs cabinet approval, will affect ads aimed at children under 16 on television and radio, in cinemas and on the internet, including on social networks and mobile apps.


According to the Spanish Agency for Nutrition and Food Safety, 40.6 per cent of Spanish children between six and nine are overweight and 17.3% qualify as obese.


The Spanish Federation of Food and Drink Industries (FIAB) said it was "surprised and outraged" by the move, as the sector has been working with the ministry for a year to update ethical practices in advertising.


Companies are "surprised and outraged," according to the Spanish Federation of Food and Drink Industries (FIAB).


FIAB director general Mauricio García de Quevedo called the move an"unfounded and unjustified attack" on a sector whose workers had ensured the continued supply of food during the pandemic.


He also criticised the "language used," saying that talk of protecting children from the food industry was unacceptable.


People should "not criminalize an entire sector," he said.


Garzon noted that similar regulations apply in Britain, Norway and Portugal, among other countries, and said the health situation in Spain was "worrying." -- Agencies


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