A new law has been introduced in France under which employers who hire models with a BMI under 18, may face jail time.
The French government is the latest to ban excessively thin models from their catwalks. Other nations that have introduced similar restrictions include Spain, Italy and Israel.
According to Reuters, the legislation states that “The activity of model is banned for any person whose Body Mass Index (BMI) is lower than levels proposed by health authorities and decreed by the ministers of health and labor.” This proposed level is a BMI of 18, which means a person around 175 centimetres tall would have to weigh at least 55 kilograms.
Fashion agencies found in violation of these restrictions could face a 75,000 Euro fine and up to 6 months imprisonment.
The bill has been criticised by members of the modelling industry for conflating thinness and anorexia. Isabelle Saint-Felix, head of France’s Nation Union of Modelling Agencies told the AFP:
“When you look at the criteria behind anorexia, you can’t look only at the body mass index when other criteria are also involved: psychological, a history of hair loss, dental problems…It’s important that the models are healthy, but it’s a little simplistic to think there won’t be any more anorexics if we get rid of very thin models.”
The legislation follows another bill passed by French Government, branding pro-anorexia websites and their content, illegal. The Daily Beast reports that sites which share information promoting unhealthy habits and provoking excessive thinness may receive a 10,000 Euro fine, the site’s distributers facing jail time.
Reportedly between 30,000- 40,000 people in France suffer from anorexia nervosa, and the government hopes the laaw will help curb this growing issue. French Foreign Minister Marisol Touraine states, “This is an important message to young women who see these models as an aesthetic example.”