Skin whitening creams remain online despite mercury findings

People continue to use skin whitening products. Picture: Cottonbro/Pexels

People continue to use skin whitening products. Picture: Cottonbro/Pexels

Published Jul 14, 2020

Share

Skin-whitening creams identified

as containing potentially dangerous levels of mercury continue

to be sold online more than seven months after a watchdog group

raised the alarm, including on platforms run by eBay,

Amazon.com and Alibaba, a Reuters review of

the sites shows.

The findings come at a time when skin lightening, a

multi-billion dollar industry especially popular in Asia, Africa

and the Caribbean, is under renewed criticism for promoting

light skin as a beauty ideal.

Many countries ban or restrict mercury in creams, which can

damage the kidneys, brain and nervous system. An international

ban on manufacturing products with mercury in them comes into

effect at end-2020.

The Zero Mercury Working Group (ZMWG), an international

coalition of non-governmental organizations, issued a report

last November that found unacceptable levels of mercury in 95

skin-lightening creams out of 158 samples tested.

The tests looked for concentrations of mercury above 1 part

per million, the level set in a 2017 global treaty, and found

levels ranging from 1.9 to 131,000 ppm.

Reuters didn't independently confirm the levels of mercury

found in the brands cited by ZMWG.

The samples were sold under more than 20 brand names, mostly

by smaller manufacturers in developing countries that had been

flagged by governments or in previous testing.

Major global brands from the likes of Unilever

, L'Oreal and Procter & Gamble were not

flagged and were not included.

ZMWG bought more than two-thirds of the creams online,

including on Flipkart, majority-owned by Walmart; South

Africa's Bidorbuy; Nigeria's Jumia; and Lazada and

Daraz, which are both part of the Alibaba Group and operate in

Southeast and South Asia, respectively, as well as on Amazon and

eBay, the coalition said.

One month after its report came out, ZMWG said that eBay,

Lazada and Daraz had pledged to remove its high-mercury product

listings but had not done so, while Amazon removed products from

its US and EU platforms, but not in India.

Reuters checks in late June showed at least 19 listings of

the products on different country sites run by all seven

e-commerce platforms, however.

After Reuters raised the issue, the platforms scrapped most

of the specific listings or promised to do so. But as of July

10, brands cited by ZMWG continued to pop up, including on

Daraz, Amazon, and eBay.

Goree Cosmetics in Pakistan and Bangkok-based Smilephan, two

companies whose name brand products were available on several

sites and showed high mercury levels, told Reuters they do not

use mercury and warned about counterfeits.

Smilephan shared with Reuters an ingredient list, test

reports from 2019 and 2011 showing no mercury in samples, and

copies of certifications it said attest to regular audits.

"We strongly believe those are not our original products,"

said Songkiat Kulwuthivilas, Smilephan's assistant managing

director. The company no longer sells its Pop Popular brand in

Africa because of the excess of counterfeits, he said.

EBay said it would sweep its sites to remove listings and

update surveillance filters imposed in December that had already

blocked 250 listings.

"We comply with local restrictions and also we have a long

history of partnering with rights owners, industry groups and

law enforcement," eBay spokeswoman Ashley Settle said.

Daraz told Reuters it would to take "necessary action" if

the listings were found to violate its policies or harm

customers.

An Amazon spokeswoman in India said the company was

investigating, but that on its 'marketplace,' responsibility

rests solely with the seller.

A California judge in 2019 ruled that Amazon was immune from

liability for third-party sellers in a case involving warnings

about mercury in skin-lightening creams.

"Most people buying on Amazon have no idea that Amazon isn't

anything like walking down to your grocery store," said food

safety lawyer Bill Marler.

Reuters

Related Topics: