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Benin Bodybuilding and Fitness Federation : Benin Bodybuilding and Fitness Federation

 Lutte contre la dépigmentation : Benin Bodybuilding and Fitness Federation

Behind the depigmentation are significant financial flows in which the state has an interest in being interested in the absence of being able to come to the end of the practice.

Voluntarily lightening your skin is also a necessity for a frank of the Beninese population men and women, young girls and young men. Depigmentation, although it has consequences on the skin of the latter, is far from being banned from their aesthetic practices.. Indeed, the issue of depigmentation has been discussed so much by the media that it has ended up no longer moving people. More, in fact, which made it more commonplace, it is the fact that almost all women do. According to a study, this practice concerns more than 75% women in Benin. This rate is even higher when you consider the men and women who do it without realizing it. Indeed, several cosmetic products contain substances that depigment the skin without this being indicated on the instructions.

Depigmentation is the consequence of the enhancement of tanned or fair skin to the detriment of a frankly black complexion. It is done through various lotions or products based on chemical components that destroy melanin, this substance that gives the skin a black color. It is therefore in Africa that depigmentation is common, but also in India and wherever black peoples are found (Americas, Melanie…). Depigmentation is a dangerous practice for the health of those who engage in it. Several awareness campaigns have shown the consequences to the point where today no one can invoke the lack of information.

Consequences of depigmentation

According to Professor Dieng Mame Thierno "Besides aesthetic complications, there are life-threatening complications, foremost among which are infections that kill quickly by septic shock”, he says, adding that "the most frequent and serious infections are bacterial dermo-hypodermitis". Besides these consequences, it must be said that depigmentation leads in some people to premature aging of the skin, this is much remarkable because of the wrinkles and creases on their bodies. Depigmentation is also according to some disease specialists like : l’hypertension, diabetes, different forms of skin cancer, kidney failure, disruption of the menstrual cycle in women… These consequences are not observed immediately but after a long period of practice of depigmentation. As for the possibility of a return to normal, Doctor Andonaba confided in an interview published by the site santetropicale.com "that stopping in time can avoid certain distant consequences and minimize the sequelae already installed on the skin". Enthusiasts of this practice are therefore warned.

The end not for tomorrow

For such a global phenomenon whose misdeeds are known to all, it may seem surprising that it persists. Nothing, at present, indicates that there will be a brake. On the contrary, skin stripping products are diversifying. Depigmentation has become a profitable business. "Skin whitening brings in billions and competes with the drug market. Entire factories in Togo, in Ivory Coast, in Nigeria, in South Africa manufacture whitening products », reveals Catherine Tetteh, president of the NGO Melanin Foundation cited by Jeune Afrique. And these products are dumped on the market without control and often even with loud advertisements..

Confronted with this, it is therefore obvious that neither prevention nor repression can do anything. Those who do will continue, for the majority, out of admiration for fair skin or to seduce those who flatter them. The companies that make it their business will continue, they too, to flood the market with their products and this through publicity.

Introduction of a special tax to limit the damage

So, why should the state not get its share of the windfall generated by the sale of these products ? Often, people who suffer from the health consequences of depigmentation are those who have few financial resources. In one way or another, the state subsidizes their care. It is therefore legitimate to introduce a special tax on all cosmetic products containing chemicals known for their ability to destroy melanin. This is done for products like cigarettes and alcohol, and with varying degrees of success in terms of discouragement. Indeed, an exponential increase will discourage low-income consumers and make those who are better off think twice. And, while waiting for the desired effect, the state will see its funds replenished.

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