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25th October 2006
Toxic chemicals and increase in breast cancer rates linked - Friday is 'Wear Pink' day
Gloucestershire Greens have repeated their calls on the EU to adopt
tough rules to protect women from cancers caused by toxic chemicals
during Breast Cancer Awareness Month, which runs throughout October.
The EU is currently drawing up proposals (known as REACH –
Registration, Evaluation and Authorisation of Chemicals) to regulate
the use and manufacture of man-made toxic chemicals present in everyday
items from carpets to cleaning products, computers to children’s toys.
Cllr Philip Booth, a spokesperson for Gloucestershire Green party, said
the REACH regulations must be based on the precautionary principle and
ensure that consumer health and environmental protection are
prioritised over the profits of the chemicals industry. He said:
"Levels of breast cancer are rising across the EU – especially in
eastern Europe and the UK, where one woman in nine will be diagnosed
with the disease at some point in their lives. We should also not
forget there are a few men who also have cancer in their breast
tissue (i)."
Philip Booth, who will be joining District Council Officers and others
in wearing pink clothes on Friday in support of the Breast Cancer
Campaign, said: "An increasing number of scientists are pointing to the
link between toxic chemicals – especially so-called gender-bending
hormone-disruptors – and breast cancer, which kills more than 10,000
people each year in the UK alone. EU legislation on the use and
manufacture of these chemicals must put consumer protection first – and
ban those chemicals for which safer alternatives exist (ii). This is
the position championed by the Green MEPs and adopted by the European
Parliament – and the responsibility now is on EU member states to put
the safety of their citizens first when negotiating the final text of
the forthcoming legislation.”
The REACH proposals were adopted at a second reading of the Environment
Committee earlier this month – and are now being discussed by the
European Commission and EU governments to reach a political agreement
on their scope before they return to the European Parliament for
adoption later this year.
Green MEP Dr Caroline Lucas, who is a co-president of the European
Parliament’s cross-party health and consumer protection group, a member
of its influential Environment Committee and a Matron of the UK-based
Women’s Environmental Network (iii), said: "With scientists and doctors
increasingly warning of the link between breast cancer and man-made
toxic chemicals, I call on the Government to take Breast Cancer
Awareness Month as its cue to back MEPs’ demands to put human
health first in the new EU chemical safety rules."
Notes to Editors:
Gloucestershire Greens have repeatedly pushed for action on this issue:
use the search engine on our website to see the many letters and news
releases.
(i) In 2002 in the UK there were 41,724 new cases of breast cancer for women and 299 for men.
(ii) For more information on the link between toxic chemicals and breast cancer see www.nomorebreastcancer.org.uk or
http://www.wwf.org.uk/news/n_0000003135.asp
(iii) Caroline Lucas is the Green / EFA group’s spokesperson on the
REACH proposals, and has called for a tough regime to protect human and
wildlife health – as well as the environment – from the toxic excesses
of the chemicals industry. She has called for the rules to include a
commitment to replace all safety tests carried out on animals, and has
drafted a detailed series of amendments to the proposals on replacing
animal tests, which can be viewed at www.reachnonanimaltests.org.uk
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