The Mandate Secretary for Health and Environmental Services at the Federal Capital Territory Administration (FCTA), Dr Adedolapo Fasawe, has expressed concern over the increasing prevalence of skin bleaching in Nigeria, warning of its serious public health implications.
Dr Fasawe raised the alarm in Abuja during the screening of a documentary focused on promoting safer beauty practices and challenging harmful social standards.
A new WHO behavioural insights toolkit is supporting countries to better understand and address the drivers of harmful skin‑lightening practices, strengthening efforts to eliminate mercury‑containing cosmetics and protect public health.
The Pakistan Standards and Quality Control Authority (PSQCA) has suspended the licenses of six beauty cream brands after they were found to be in violation of safety and quality standards, including the presence of hazardous substances such as mercury.
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The EcoWaste Coalition has detected mercury at over 30,000 parts per million (ppm) in a Pakistan-made facial cream that promises “fairer skin in two weeks” and is supposedly “safe to apply day and night.” The toxic watchdog group announced it has found high levels of mercury in Arena Gold New Fairness Cream for Men purchased online for P179, inclusive of shipping charges.
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On this International Day for the Elimination of Racial Discrimination, we highlight that detoxifying cosmetics and beauty ideals is also a way to fight racism..
Exposure to mercury in cosmetics, including some skin-lightening products, disproportionately affects women & vulnerable communities. Under the MinamataConvention, Parties commit to protect human health and the environment by phasing out mercury-added cosmetics.
Over 20 international health and environmental organizations have called on Pakistan’s Competition Commission (CCP) to halt the manufacture and global trade of mercury-containing skin-whitening creams. The move intensifies scrutiny of the country’s cosmetics manufacturing sector, after a recent testing round found that 35 of 37 creams manufactured in Pakistan contained mercury levels thousands of times higher than the legal limit.
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Uruguay compartió su experiencia en la eliminación gradual de la amalgama dental con otros países de América Latina durante un taller regional organizado en el marco del proyecto sobre amalgama dental del Fondo para el Medio Ambiente Mundial (GEF).
Montevideo, 4 de marzo de 2026. Autoridades de los ministerios de Salud Pública y Ambiente, organismos internacionales y delegaciones de varios países de la región participan en Montevideo en el Taller Regional para la reducción progresiva del uso de amalgama dental, un espacio de intercambio técnico orientado a fortalecer la cooperación regional y acelerar la implementación del Convenio de Minamata sobre el Mercurio.
Uruguay shared its experience in phasing out dental amalgam with other Latin American countries in a regional workshop under the GEF dental amalgam project.
La ministra de Salud Pública, Cristina Lustemberg, presidió un taller regional de la Organización Mundial de la Salud (OMS) sobre la reducción progresiva del uso de amalgamas dentales y anunció la próxima firma de una ordenanza que prohibirá que se utilicen en el país.
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As we celebrate International Women’s Month, toxics watchdog BAN Toxics has issued a consumer alert on the illegal sale of prohibited beauty products containing mercury—a highly toxic heavy metal that poses serious risks to the nervous, digestive, and immune systems.
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In response to the rising health risks associated with skin bleaching, the Nigerian Association of Dermatologists (NAD) has launched a nationwide public awareness campaign encouraging Nigerians to embrace their natural skin tone and prioritise their health. The campaign, themed “EmbraceYourSkin”, was introduced at a press conference attended by dermatologists, health advocates, journalists, and stakeholders across the healthcare and beauty sectors.
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Ebay Sued for Not Warning About Mercury in Skin Lighteners Lawsuit alleges consumers were knowingly exposed to mercury without legally required warnings.
Harmful beauty standards carry serious health risks. Ellen Rosskam and Małgorzata Alicja Stylo show how multilateral action is removing mercury from skin-lightening cosmetics.
Sri Lanka’s proposed legislation to regulate cosmetics marks a significant but overdue policy intervention with far-reaching implications for public health, trade, and the wider economy. The draft Cosmetics Regulation Bill, expected to be opened for public consultation in January 2026, reflects growing concern over the unregulated influx of cosmetic products into the country, particularly through informal and illicit channels.
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Walk into any cosmetic store across Pakistan you would be greeted with shelves filled with colorful promises of “instant glow”, “fairness in seven days”.
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The National Institute for Minamata Disease (NIMD), in collaboration with United Nations Environment Programme (UNEP), is organizing laboratory proficiency testing (PT) for assessing the analytical capacity for mercury. The PT provides the individual proficiency levels of participating laboratories as well as collective mercury monitoring capacity in the region. UNEP is supporting this activity via the Japan-funded regional project in Asia and the Pacific.
Last week at COP-6 in Geneva, Switzerland, over 150 governments agreed on a global plan to crack down on cosmetics containing mercury. The plan will see policing agencies, including Interpol and the World Customs Organization (WCO), collaborate to investigate where the products are manufactured, transported, and sold.
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Geneva, Switzerland — In a landmark decision, today the Sixth Conference of the Parties (COP-6) of the Minamata Convention invited the Secretariat of the Minamata Convention on Mercury to work with Interpol, the World Customs Organisation and others to investigate the manufacture, import and export of mercury-added cosmetics. COP-6 also decided to work towards closing the loopholes legally allowing mercury compounds to be traded, as this is compromising the Convention’s objective, particularly related to lacing cosmetics with mercury.
Popular skin-lightening products widely available on Amazon have been found to contain mercury levels far exceeding permissible limits, an assessment repeatedly highlighted by the New Delhi-based non-profit Toxics Link.
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Out of eight samples tested, seven failed, showing mercury concentrations thousands of times higher than the legal limit in India. A global mercury watchdog has found that the e-commerce giant Amazon is selling dangerously high levels of illegal mercury-containing skin lightening products (SLPs) in India, as well as in countries like Mexico and the UAE.
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Pakistan’s obsession with fair skin has fueled a dangerous market for skin whitening creams, many of which are found to contain harmful levels of mercury. The Competition Commission of Pakistan (CCP) has launched an inquiry into companies suspected of using mercury in their products, which is banned in many countries due to its toxicity.
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The New York (NY), US, Office of the Attorney General (OAG) has ordered three companies to immediately stop selling cosmetics that contain unlawful and dangerous levels of mercury.
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A court in India has given the death penalty to a man for burning alive his wife over her skin colour.
In her statements before her death, Lakshmi had said that her husband Kishandas "routinely taunted her for being dark skinned".
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