France bans super skinny models
PARIS -- A new law banning the use of super skinny fashion models in France came into effect on Saturday, in efforts to target unrealistic ideas of beauty and eating disorders.
Models operating in the fashion hub will be required to provide doctor's certificate to state their overall physical health and prove their body mass index (BMI) sits within a healthy range.
The index, a measure of weight in relation to height and age, will be compared to the World Health Organization's standards of underweight to decide whether a model is certified.
Marisol Touraine, French minister of social affairs and health, explained the new rules on Friday in a statement, saying that they were aimed at avoiding the promotion of inaccessible beauty ideals and preventing youth anorexia.
The previous version of the law, backed and adopted by French parliamentarians in late 2015, suggested a minimum BMI for models, prompting protests from the country's fashion industry. Employers breaking the law could face fines of up to 75,000 euros ($82,000) and up to six months in jail.
In addition, another law obliging magazines and advertisers to label digitally altered images will come into force on October 1.
According to the law, images where a model's appearance has been manipulated need to be labeled "photographie retouchee" (retouched photograph).
Anorexia affects between 30,000 to 40,000 people in France, 90% of whom are women.