Why it’s time all African countries banned skin lightening creams

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Rambie
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Why it’s time all African countries banned skin lightening creams

Post by Rambie »

With up to 70% of women using skin lightening creams in parts of Africa, Cote d’Ivoire has led the charge in tackling skin lighteners and has banned the practise nationally. It is time for the rest of the continent to follow.

Skin lighteners have become a common part of life in communities across the continent which is home to an estimated two thirds of the world’s darker-skinned population. In the late 1960s, 60% of urban African women reported using skin lightener formulas. It became the fourth most commonly used household product after soap, tea and tinned milk.

These days, 75% of Nigerian women and between 52% and 67% of Senegalese women use skin lightening products. A survey conducted in South Africa’s administrative capital Pretoria showed that 35% of women use them.

Demand is also high in Ghana, Tanzania and Kenya where buoyant economies and advertising have targeted young women of marriageable age. There has been a marked shift in male preferences toward women with light-coloured skin emphasising the idea of “racial capital”.

But skin lighteners are damaging. The World Health Organisation has banned the active ingredients of skin lighteners – a chemical agent called hydroquinone and mercury – from being used in any unregulated skin products.

Unregulated products have significantly higher quantities of hydroquinone and mercury than those recommended by dermatologists. Using them could lead to liver and kidney failure or hyperpigmentation, which is dark skin patches forming on the area where the product is used. There is also a risk of skin cancer because the melanin synthesis which protects the skin against ultraviolet radiation is inhibited by hydroquinone.


Image
A women applies skin lightening cream to her legs in downtown Kingston, Jamaica.


The stereotype

The word “yellowbone” has gained popularity in the US as well as countries like South Africa. It refers to a lighter-skinned black person, perpetuating the lengthy racist Eurocentric tradition which propagates negative images and aesthetics of black people and people of colour.

African descendants in America, the Caribbean and Brazil have internalised these fabricated and fictionalised images of themselves. In an American setting this is a psychological abnormality coined Post Trauma Slavery Disorder. In South Africa, it could be equated to what I have coined “Post-Apartheid Inferiority Disorder” (PAID). The most visible global symptoms include:

1) use of skin lightening or bleaching creams

2) preference for white or light-skinned friends and children

3) wearing of blond hair or blond wigs

4) internalised inferiority and a lack of self-love or veneration

5) lack of group unity and trust.

The motivation for using skin lighteners is linked to colonial history. Lightening one’s skin is perceived to come with increased privileges, higher social standing, better employment and increased marital prospects. This, coupled with influential marketing strategies from transnational cosmetic houses using iconic celebrities, increases the allure – primarily for women, but increasingly for men.

Skin lightening is described in many different ways across the continent. In Mali and Senegal, the terms “caco” and “xeesal” are used while in Ghana, the term “nensoebenis” describes the condition of the skin after chronic skin lightener use.

With its political overtones, South Africa has a distinctive history with skin lighteners. Various ethnic languages describe the practice. In isiXhosa it is known as “ukutsheyisa” which means “to chase beauty”. In isiZulu it is known as “ukucreamer” meaning “applying creams on the skin”.
The health risks

Skin lightening creams can be divided into legal products recommended by dermatologists and illegal, over-the-counter and unregulated products.

Most reputable skin lighteners are expensive. Because of this, the market is vulnerable to over-the-counter, unregulated and unsupervised use of skin lighteners. The use of these creams can result in irreversible skin damage.

The majority of illegal “depigmenting” or skin lightening creams can contain between 8% to 15% of hydroquinone. The use of hydroquinone in cosmetics has been banned since 2001. Hydroquinone is used in large quantities in paints and as a photographic developing solution.

Despite the laws restricting the use of hydroquinone, I found a range of different brands of skin lighteners available in pharmacies and supermarkets in the Johannesburg area.

The attraction to the practise is encouraged by overt advertising and the advent and influence of social media and mobile phones with roaming apps.

Although individuals have started speaking out against skin lightening, such as the Senegalese models who took a stand at the Dakar Fashion Week, governments need to take action. Regulations should ensure that the creams are safe and that illegal products are kept off the market. In addition, governments should encourage the view that being paler skinned isn’t a panacea and that black is beautiful too.The Conversation

This shit spread to west Africa too ... :|
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Re: Why it’s time all African countries banned skin lightening creams

Post by PureQ »

What does government have to do with this? Do they have to watch every kids in their country? It's not their responsbility. It's the parents.

It is the parent of the daughters fault. They are the one who raised them like that, they are the one encouraging them to do it in the first place, they are the one who taught them the "light and dark" chart bullshit, white washed them and etc.
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Re: Why it’s time all African countries banned skin lightening creams

Post by SahanGalbeed »

In English history I think {if I am not mistaken} it is Queen Victoria who put an end to it , where people wore wigs and paint their faces white . She thought it was vulgar , I do the same .
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Re: Why it’s time all African countries banned skin lightening creams

Post by Hyperactive »

cause men prefer light skinned traditionaly. even in the west blond is preferable in general.

i would blame men in general.

ps; horta tan yaree widwida o kenyian ta ah ma arakten? she is beautuful and dark as they say. marka there is hope.
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FarhanYare
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Re: Why it’s time all African countries banned skin lightening creams

Post by FarhanYare »

^
That's true, but these women suffer from body image disorder.

India is the biggest skin bleach market
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Re: Why it’s time all African countries banned skin lightening creams

Post by jalaaludin5 »

Jidhka' kooke (coca Cola) waji Fanta.
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cheifaqilbari
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Re: Why it’s time all African countries banned skin lightening creams

Post by cheifaqilbari »

What about the whites wanna be brownies www.https://m.youtube.com/?#/watch?v=ccwdfbCCWK0.
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Re: Why it’s time all African countries banned skin lightening creams

Post by TheLoFather »

:twisted:
jalaaludin5 wrote:Jidhka' kooke (coca Cola) waji Fanta.
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I prefer coca cola to Fanta!
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GAMES
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Re: Why it’s time all African countries banned skin lightening creams

Post by GAMES »

It also causes skin problems, since these things are made from really dangerous chemicals that can harm the body.

There was a video on YT about Somalis in Kenya using Dianna to lighten their skin and the side effects.
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Re: Why it’s time all African countries banned skin lightening creams

Post by inaXasan »

Banning is stupid, You'll have an illegal underground black market that will cost a lot of money and lives to control. If someone wants to be light skin then let them you have no control over people's lives.

The best you can do to stop this is to give the people a dark skin role model and not associate dark skin with being lower class.

Light skin is more associated with beauty in the world these days so you have to be light skin to be considered beautiful. Somali skin lightening unfortunately comes from this "white is beauty" bs :(

If you destroy your melanin you'll be lighter but since melanin protects you from the sun. you'll age in dog years like white people.

Melanin is a blessing. my grandfather is dark skin and 80 something and he looks 30 years younger than the melanin deficient whites his age.

Also there is skin cancer and other bad destructive diseases so you'll be "pretty" for a while before you become unbearable to look at or worse case, you die.
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Re: Why it’s time all African countries banned skin lightening creams

Post by InaSamaale »

I have no issues with adults doing what they want to achieve some ideal "beauty" ideal but this stuff is out of control when you have 15 year old girls already lightening themselves. Very sad.
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Re: Why it’s time all African countries banned skin lightening creams

Post by LiquidHYDROGEN »

inaXasan wrote:Banning is stupid, You'll have an illegal underground black market that will cost a lot of money and lives to control. If someone wants to be light skin then let them you have no control over people's lives.

The best you can do to stop this is to give the people a dark skin role model and not associate dark skin with being lower class.

Light skin is more associated with beauty in the world these days so you have to be light skin to be considered beautiful. Somali skin lightening unfortunately comes from this "white is beauty" bs :(

If you destroy your melanin you'll be lighter but since melanin protects you from the sun. you'll age in dog years like white people.

Melanin is a blessing. my grandfather is dark skin and 80 something and he looks 30 years younger than the melanin deficient whites his age.

Also there is skin cancer and other bad destructive diseases so you'll be "pretty" for a while before you become unbearable to look at or worse case, you die.
True. I have seen billboards and adverts in Somaliland, Djibouti and Somalia with Turkish/arab/hindi women pictures all over. If you present a type of look as more beautiful then it is only a matter of time the population start thinking it's true. Just look at what Hollywood has done to the image of the cadaan and the madow. The cadaan look is now the most sought after all over the world thanks to Hollywood and Colonial brainwashing.

It wasn't always like this. Somali men were praised for their dark skin in poetry and the colour maariin (reddish-brown) was seen as the ideal colour for Somali men and women.

The sad thing is Somalis are actually seen as attractive and exotic in most countries around the world and it's only recently thanks to civil war and the rise of arab-wannabes that have caused this inferiority complex. Instead of using foreign models why not use Somalis?
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Re: Why it’s time all African countries banned skin lightening creams

Post by Tuushi »

Wonder if they have also banned tobacco and alcohol.

skin lightening is every where.India and most of other Asia being the worst.
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GAMES
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Re: Why it’s time all African countries banned skin lightening creams

Post by GAMES »

Before and after pics....

Image

:whoo:
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Re: Why it’s time all African countries banned skin lightening creams

Post by jalaaludin5 »

GAMES wrote:Before and after pics....

Image

:whoo:
Ain't no way in hell that's the same woman. But if it is, she must have applied some sort of makeup before that picture was taken.

Lightning creams have came a long way if that's the results of current products.
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