Premium
This is an archive article published on November 8, 1997

Animals won’t be guinea pigs anymore in UK

LONDON, November 7: The British Government has halted cosmetic product testing on animals, a move animal welfare groups hailed as a victory...

.

LONDON, November 7: The British Government has halted cosmetic product testing on animals, a move animal welfare groups hailed as a victory although it affects only a small number of experiments.

Home Office Minister Lord Williams said yesterday the three research houses in Britain that had conducted the tests had voluntarily agreed to stop, and that no new licences for such tests would be granted by the Labour Government.

This means between 200 and 300 rabbits, guinea pigs and rats a year will be spared the experiments now conducted to see whether they are adversely affected by finished cosmetic products.

Story continues below this ad

But they are only a fraction of the 2,800 animals that are subjected to tests annually in Britain for the individual ingredients that go into cosmetics.

Williams said the ingredients tests are not being stopped right away because the bulk of the ingredients, such as anti-oxidants and preservatives, are also used for medical or pharmaceutical purposes.

However, he said the Government would seek to identify those ingredients primarily used for “vanity products” and work towards a ban on testing them on animals.

“Our policy unambiguously is that the use of animals is only to be adopted in justifiable circumstances, and has always got to be in the context of the due reverence for the fact that we are using living creatures,” Williams told a news conference.

Story continues below this ad

“Cosmetic product testing is being stopped. We want to go forward to see how far we can stop (cosmetic) ingredient testing,” he said.

The Body Shop, a cosmetics company that has long campaigned against animal testing, said the announcement placed Britain in the forefront of European Nations on the animal testing issue.

Technically, it is not a legal ban, and Williams said there was no room in the Government’s legislative programme in the next 18 months for a legislated ban, although he did not rule out such a proposal in the long term.

Williams said he was legally prevented from naming the companies that agreed to the testing ban.y

Latest Comment
Post Comment
Read Comments
Advertisement
Advertisement
Advertisement
Advertisement