Majority of Toys in Indian Market Contain Toxic Chemical: Study


Majority of Toys in Indian Market Contain Toxic Chemical: Study

AGENCIES
 
NEW DELHI, Jan 16 : Next time you buy a toy for your little ones, be more cautious as a new study says many of them may contain a toxic chemical which can prove dangerous for children especially those below three years.

A lab testing of random samples of various brands of toys available at Delhi markets found the presence of phthalates that can cause health disorders like allergy, asthma, skeletal defects, damage male reproductive system and impair lungs of children, Sunita Narain, director of Centre for Science and Environment (CSE), told reporters here on Friday.

The study by CSE found over 45 per cent of the samples exceeded internationally accepted safe limits for phthalates.

"What is shocking is that many brands had labels like 'non-toxic, safe for use'. Phthalates are chemicals used to soften plastic. So soft and inflatable toys can be more dangerous for the children who tend to put these in their mouth," Chandra Bhushan, associate director of CSE, said.

The study assumes significance as the ban on import of toys, not meeting voluntary standards issued by the Bureau of Indian Standards (BIS), will end on January 23.

"But even these BIS standards do not cover phthalates while the European Union and the US have long back restricted the use of some phthalates in toys and child care articles to 0.1 per cent," Narain said.

The study noted that the Taiwanese and Chinese toys were the most contaminated.

"Of the 24 samples picked randomly, 14 were found to be from China and 2 from Taiwan. 57 per cent of China-made toys and 100 per cent of Taiwan-made toys crossed the safe limit," Chandra Bhushan said.

India had banned import of toys from China on safety grounds in January last year. However, when China threatened to take the issue to WTO, New Delhi allowed import of Chinese toys if they show independent lab certificates that they meet voluntary Indian standards. Later the notification was broadened to cover imports from all countries.

"The government, while making it mandatory for imports to conform to standards, does not ask of its own industry to meet the same. This is clearly a non-tariff barrier to trade and China threatened to approach the WTO on this basis," Narain said.

"The regulation on imports expires on January 23. The government has two options. Either regulate all toys, both domestic production and imports, or let the order expire and leave the entire market unregulated," she said.

The CSE lab tested 24 toy samples -- 15 soft toys and nine hard toys. All were found to have presence of one or more phthalates.

When asked whether manufacturers can avoid use of the chemical, Chandra Bhushan said, "Yes we have alternatives. Some of them are already making toys without PVC and polythene, but the products are only meant for exporting."

Rajesh Arora, general secretary of the Toy Association of India claimed the toy industry, which clocked 20 per cent growth in exports in 2008-09, is already meeting western standards for phthalates for export products. 

  

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Comment on this article

  • DONY LOBO, MILAGRES, MANGALORE-DOHA,QATAR

    Mon, Jan 18 2010

    Not only Toys may be dangerous but even the Toys which are sealed inside eggshaped chocolates could be more harmful because the chemicals may directly affect the Milk and Chocolate contents in the pack... a sure way of food poisoning and no one may ever suspect the real reason.

    I know of an international company making chocolate eggs with toys inside who import toys from China and other sources. God alone knows how many children may have been affected not only in India or the gulf but even worldwide. Its nothing but a genocide.

    DisAgree Agree Reply Report Abuse

  • Lancelot N Tauro, Mangalore/Doha Qatar

    Mon, Jan 18 2010

    Dear Commentators Why you all fingering at Nagesh NaYaka, let him continue with this negative attiutude Its look good for him. If tsnuami, or earthquate appears he has birth attitude of blaming on UPA negative slogans like JAI HO.

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  • shahnawaz kukkikatte, dubai/udupi

    Sun, Jan 17 2010

    Mr Nagesh Nayak, Toy manufacturing is a small scale industry and is in the perview of state administration. First ask your BJP ruled states to stop manufacturing these chemical toys and ask them not import these into their states from neighbouring non BJP states. First set yourself as role model. Dont just show your fingers to UPA alone. All horders and black marketers belong to your party and your party is protecting them. Or you can ask your party/parivar followers not to buy these toys for their kids. You have always shown double standards and this time it is not unexpected and not surprising one. Jai Ho UPA....a......b...c....d....x..y...z..

    DisAgree Agree Reply Report Abuse

  • John Tauro, Mangalore / Kuwait

    Sat, Jan 16 2010

    For the sake of all innocent children who are the world's future, let the concerned authorities wake up and at least temporarily ban the sale and production as well as import of such slow poisoning toys until stringent laws are passed and ensured that no hazardous chemicals are used in the manufacture of toys.

    DisAgree Agree Reply Report Abuse

  • A.S.Mathew, U.S.A.

    Sat, Jan 16 2010

    Recently, it was found that the toys imported from China has a lot of toxic chemicals in them, and it can be highly dangerious for the children. China's main import from the U.S. is factory waste of recycled products. From the broadloom carpet companies, a lot of their waste materials are recycled and shipped to China for toy making industry. Carpet industry used to produce carpet from virgin nylon resins, but now carpet is produced from recycled plasstic materials like soft drink bottles etc. Each recycling process will create more toxity to the materials, and the final waste materials will be going to China for making toys. Even while I eat fish products like Shrimp and Tilopia farm grown in China, I feel dizzy because of some chemicals in them. Some of them are coming from highly poluted ponds, and the fish get a good dose of it.

    DisAgree Agree Reply Report Abuse

  • Joseph F. Gonsalves, Bannur,Puttur/Mangalore

    Sat, Jan 16 2010

    Dear Mr. Nagesh Nayak, The fundamentals are going every door steps to poison the minds of the people with leaflets. Let them do this stringent work instead of spoiling and corrupting the minds of the citizens. General Elections will be held only after 5 years till that they should not sleep let them wake and keep a border vigil so that No Nepali, No Bangladeshi, No Bhutani, No Pakistani, No Myanmari, No Tibetian and Sri Lankan enter our country even their manufactured goods. Inform all of your clan/Amchigele people to destroy whatever Chinese toys they have in their show rooms and warehouses bought in cheap rates and selling in double rates. Do not allow them to sell destroy it.

    DisAgree Agree Reply Report Abuse

  • fathima, mangalore

    Sat, Jan 16 2010

    There should be a provision in law to file case of attempted poisoning against the related minister and the top bureaucrats of the relevant ministry for knowingly allowing sale of poisonous products.

    DisAgree Agree Reply Report Abuse

  • nagesh nayak, bangalore

    Fri, Jan 15 2010

    STRINGENT ACTION TO BE TAKEN AGAINST MANUFACTURER OF TOYS WHICH CONTAINS TOXIC CHEMICALS. THEY HAVE NO RIGHT TO PLAY WITH THE LIFE OF INNOCENT CHILDREN. UPA SHOULD WAKE FROM SLEEP . JAI HO.

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