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Junk food ad ban introduced
01/01/2008 21:17 - (SA)
London - Britain introduced a ban on advertising junk food to under-16s on Tuesday, aimed at promoting healthy eating and countering growing child obesity.
The ban, which extends measures already in place for under-10s, will curb television adverts for food and drink products with high fat, salt and sugar content.
Specifically, the new measures, agreed last year, will ban adverts for junk food and drink around all programmes of particular appeal to children less than 16 years.
According to official data released in October half of all Britons will be obese in 25 years if current trends are not halted; furthermore, 86% of men will be overweight in 15 years and 70% of women in 20.
Some campaigners say the ban which came into force on Monday does not go far enough, calling for a total ban on junk food ads after 21:00.
"We need urgent action to help people, especially children, avoid the less healthy, less happy and, ultimately, shorter life that obesity leads to," said Richard Watts of the Children's Food Campaign.
Prime Minister Gordon Brown launched a new £100m programme in October aiming to increase from two to five the number of hours of physical education in schools per week.
Some £2.3m has already been set aside in the last 10 years to increase the number of hours of sport in school.
- AFP
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