Google – AFP, 18 May 2013
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Pizza
slices and french fries are served during lunch at a US high school
on November
18, 2011 (Getty Images/AFP/File, Joe Raedle)
|
LIMA —
Peru's president signed a new law Thursday designed to reduce child obesity by
encouraging healthier eating habits in schools.
The law
regulates advertising for fatty foods and fizzy soft drinks in schools, the
first step in a plan to ban some junk food altogether.
Business
groups, worried about their revenue, have reacted angrily to the plans.
But
President Ollanta Humala told them: "We cannot view our children as simply
a market to generate sales and maximize profits."
One feature
of the new law is a plan to set up stands selling quinoa, an ancient and
healthy Andean grain, in schools.
Advertising
will be regulated to ban those that encourage immoderate consumption of food
and non-alcoholic beverages loaded with trans fats, sugar, salt and saturated
fats, the law says.
The
Peruvian Economics Institute derided the law as intrusive and heavy handed.
But the
Peruvian Medical Association's president Juan Villena backed it: it was as
important to regulate ads for junk food as it was ads for cigarettes, he
argued.
Humala has
said the law has international support and puts Peru on the cutting edge of
healthy food legislation in the Andean region.

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