France to fine those encouraging anorexia
Inciting people to xtreme thinness could be punishable by a year in prison and a fine of $11,000
PARIS:
Inciting people to extreme thinness could be punishable by a year in prison and a fine of $11,000 in France after MPs voted on Thursday to take aim at "pro-anorexia" websites.
Deputies voted through an amendment to a law on public health that would punish anyone "provoking people to excessive thinness by encouraging prolonged dietary restrictions that could expose them to a danger of death or directly impair their health."
Up to an estimated 40,000 people suffer from anorexia in France, nine out of 10 of them women and girls.
The law is designed to take aim at so-called "pro-Ana" sites accused of encouraging excessive thinness.
The two deputies that proposed the amendment, Maud Olivier and Catherine Coutelle, said that "certain sites known as 'pro-Ana' can push people into a vicious circle of anorexia and authorities cannot do anything about it."
The new law is "necessary" and "will not call into question the idea of freedom of expression on the Internet."
Anorexia nervosa is usually a chronic illness that affects nearly one percent of people. It is typically diagnosed in young women aged 15-19.
It has one of the highest mortality rates of a psychiatric disorder -- between six and 11% -- and is among the most difficult to treat, doctors say.
Inciting people to extreme thinness could be punishable by a year in prison and a fine of $11,000 in France after MPs voted on Thursday to take aim at "pro-anorexia" websites.
Deputies voted through an amendment to a law on public health that would punish anyone "provoking people to excessive thinness by encouraging prolonged dietary restrictions that could expose them to a danger of death or directly impair their health."
Up to an estimated 40,000 people suffer from anorexia in France, nine out of 10 of them women and girls.
The law is designed to take aim at so-called "pro-Ana" sites accused of encouraging excessive thinness.
The two deputies that proposed the amendment, Maud Olivier and Catherine Coutelle, said that "certain sites known as 'pro-Ana' can push people into a vicious circle of anorexia and authorities cannot do anything about it."
The new law is "necessary" and "will not call into question the idea of freedom of expression on the Internet."
Anorexia nervosa is usually a chronic illness that affects nearly one percent of people. It is typically diagnosed in young women aged 15-19.
It has one of the highest mortality rates of a psychiatric disorder -- between six and 11% -- and is among the most difficult to treat, doctors say.