Nigeria’s dangerous skin whitening obsessionPosted in Africa, Articles, Health/Medicine/Genetics, Media Archive, Social Science on 2013-04-07 01:29Z by Steven |
Nigeria’s dangerous skin whitening obsession
Al Jazeera
2013-04-06
Mohammed Adow
Nigeria has the world’s highest percentage of women using skin lightening agents in the quest for “beauty”.
Lagos, Nigeria – After carefully washing her face, legs and arms, Taiwo Solomon vigorously rubs cream over her body. She is meticulous and makes sure she covers her entire face. Soloman, 32, is bleaching her skin. She believes fairer skin could be her ticket to a better life. So she spends her meager savings on cheap black-market concoctions that promise to lighten her pigment.
This has been a daily routine for the past 15 years. Now several shades lighter she says her new skin makes her feel more beautiful and confident.
“Bleaching just makes me feel special, like am walking around in a spotlight,” she told Al Jazeera. “I am not seeking to be totally white, I just want to look beautiful. I cannot stop using the lightening agents,” she adds.
Solomon is not alone. According to the World Health Organisation (WHO), 77 percent of women in Nigeria use skin-lightening products, the world’s highest percentage. That compares with 59 percent in Togo, and 27 percent in Senegal. The reasons for this are varied but most people say they use skin-lighteners because they want “white skin”.
In many parts of Africa, lighter-skinned women are considered more beautiful and are believed to be more successful and likely to find marriage.
It’s not only women though who are obsessed with bleaching their skins. Some men too are involved in the practice…
…Dangerous consequences
Skin bleaching comes with hazardous health consequences. The dangers associated with the use of toxic compounds for skin bleaching include blood cancers such as leukemia and cancers of the liver and kidneys as well as severe skin conditions.
Hardcore bleachers use illegal ointments containing toxins like mercury, a metal that blocks production of melanin, which gives the skin its colour, but can also be toxic…
Read the entire article here.