Read

User menu

Search form

India Bans All Animal-Tested Cosmetics, Citing Ghandian Nonviolence Principles

India Bans All Animal-Tested Cosmetics, Citing Ghandian Nonviolence Principles
Tue, 10/28/2014 - by Paromita Pain

Finally, after a very long while, India is in the headlines for all the right reasons. First the country announced a national ban on animal testing for cosmetics. Then, five months later, it declared a complete “ban on the import of all cosmetic products which have been tested on animals.”

As many in the country’s media proudly reported, India recently became the first country in South Asia to ban the import of animal-tested beauty products.

Activists have long been working to create awareness around the issue, and the ban was largely a result of Humane Society International/India's “Be Cruelty Free” campaign – one of the largest global campaigns on animal cruelty which petitioned the Ministry of Health earlier this year with over 70,000 signatures.

The ban will become effective Nov. 13 in the form of Rule 135-B, which states, “Prohibition of import of cosmetics tested on animals... No cosmetic that has been tested on animals after the commencement of Drugs and Cosmetics (Fifth Amendment) Rules, 2014 shall be imported into the country.”

The amended Drugs and Cosmetics Rules, which previously enabled the import of animal-tested cosmetics, puts India in the league of the European Union and Israel, which have enacted such prohibitions since 2009. China now also promises to follow suit.

China earlier required a “mandatory” animal testing requirement on any product to be sold inside the country. That country has now agreed to start work on forbidding the mandatory requirements for local cosmetic products.

Promoting Ahimsa

“India has no reason to buy or test cosmetics on animals,” says the animal rights activist Vaikunth Narayanan. “We have a huge industry of natural products like the Khadi industries where great products are produced at very reasonable prices. Besides, it works along Gandhian principles: Ahimsa, or nonviolence, is a principle for all living creatures.”

Alokparna Sengupta, the campaigns manager for Humane Society International/India steering the successful Be Cruelty Free drive, says, “India has made history for animals in South Asia. This is a huge achievement that could not have been possible without the compassion of our government, consumers and industry.”

And the decision isn’t just restricted to the area of cosmetics. As Sengupta says, “This can be a defining moment in the modernization of India’s safety science, with potentially hundreds of thousands more animals spared pain and suffering.”

Legal Necessity?

The use of animals in cosmetics safety testing is not legally required in India. Yet the Bureau of Indian Standards recommends certain tests which legalize skin and eye irritation, in which chemicals are rubbed on to the shaved skin or dripped into the eyes of rabbits; repeated force-feeding studies that last weeks or months, looking for signs of general illness or specific health hazards; and even widely condemned “lethal dose” tests, in which animals are forced to swallow massive amounts of a test chemical to determine the dose that causes death.

As the Humane Society International website explains, “At the end of a test, the animals are killed, normally by asphyxiation, neck-breaking or decapitation. Pain relief is not provided.”

No official statistics exist on the widespread use of animal testing for cosmetics in India. Tests recommended by the Bureau of Indian Standards include the use of rats, rabbits and hamsters. Cosmetic companies that are already in full compliance with a test and sales ban in the 28 countries of the Europe Union initially resisted a similar ban in India.

As Sengupta says, “We have heard the industry’s arguments during extensive consultation meetings, and not a single issue raised justified tampering with India’s cosmetics animal testing ban, nor the long-awaited import ban."

"Testing cosmetics on animals goes against the non-violence principle of Ahimsa, and protecting sentient animals from suffering is enshrined in India’s constitution as the duty of every citizen," Sengupta concluded.

A Sustained Campaign

Humane Society International received more than 70,000 signatures from citizens across India to bolster its case. However, the campaign didn’t happen overnight but was the result of sustained and patient efforts.

In a statement, Gauri Maulekhi, a trustee with People for Animals, said: “India has shown outstanding leadership by so swiftly advancing first a ban on cosmetics animal testing and now a ban on animal-tested cosmetics imported from overseas."

"By working so diligently with the #BeCrueltyFree India campaign, our policy makers have put India on the map as a country transforming its laboratories and regulation from outdated test methods to state-of-the-art science. Animals, consumers, scientists and companies have everything to gain from such modernization.”

Especially among the older generation in India, using cruelty free products has always been the norm. “In India, we have a rich tradition of using natural products like leaves, oils and herbs as cosmetics,” says Dr. Narayan Shetty, an Ayurveda practitioner. “It’s time we went back to our roots.”

Follow the author @ParoP.

 

3 WAYS TO SHOW YOUR SUPPORT

ONE-TIME DONATION

Just use the simple form below to make a single direct donation.

DONATE NOW

MONTHLY DONATION

Be a sustaining sponsor. Give a reacurring monthly donation at any level.

GET SOME MERCH!

Now you can wear your support too! From T-Shirts to tote bags.

SHOP TODAY

Sign Up

Article Tabs

Ending fascists’ grip on power not only requires voting them out, but replacing them with the right people.

One pressing question is how the worldwide outrage might, and could, spread to his other business interests, not least his largest interest: SpaceX.

There is a real human cost behind cold, calculated “efficiency.”

Musk's unelected role at the forefront of U.S. government, and his company's near monopolisation of satellite internet communications, increases his global political and economic power grab, and attacks on democracy.

A rug pull occurs when a ‘meme’ or ‘shit’ coin is created, investors pour in, and the price spikes — at which point the early stakeholders sell and tank the coin’s value, as happened with the $TRUMP token.

Ending fascists’ grip on power not only requires voting them out, but replacing them with the right people.

One pressing question is how the worldwide outrage might, and could, spread to his other business interests, not least his largest interest: SpaceX.

There is a real human cost behind cold, calculated “efficiency.”

In many European countries, the far right holds or shares power. Democracy is in crisis.

Posted 2 months 10 hours ago

If Trump indeed tanks your 401(k) to make himself and his friends even richer, the opposition party should make that the centerpiece of their attack heading into next year’s election.

Posted 2 months 11 hours ago

Yarvin saw the “red pill” as the realization that the Enlightenment ideals he came to associate with “the cathedral” and democracy are actually a poison leading to societal decadence and decline.

Posted 1 month 1 week ago

As the American public continues to publicly stand up to the administration, Trump’s grip on power will eventually slip.

Posted 1 month 1 week ago

It is clear that authoritarian fascists, in the United States and elsewhere, do not want education that promotes critical thinking.

Posted 1 month 1 week ago

There is a real human cost behind cold, calculated “efficiency.”

Musk's unelected role at the forefront of U.S. government, and his company's near monopolisation of satellite internet communications, increases his global political and economic power grab, and attacks on democracy.