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Skinny models wearing thin in
fashion shocker
Madrid -
The world's first ban on overly thin models at a top-level fashion
show in Madrid has caused outrage among modeling agencies and raised
the prospect of restrictions at other venues.
Madrid's fashion week has turned away
underweight models after protests that girls and young women were
trying to copy their rail-thin looks and developing eating disorders.
Organizers say they want to project
an image of beauty and health, rather than a waif-like, or heroin chic
look.
But Cathy Gould, of New York's Elite
modeling agency, said the fashion industry was being used as a
scapegoat for illnesses like anorexia and bulimia.
"I think its outrageous, I understand
they want to set this tone of healthy beautiful women, but what about
discrimination against the model and what about the freedom of the
designer," said Gould, Elite's North America director, adding that the
move could harm careers of naturally "gazelle-like" models.
Madrid's regional government, which
sponsors the show and imposed restrictions, said it did not blame
designers and models for anorexia. It said the fashion industry had a
responsibility to portray healthy body images.
"Fashion is a mirror and many
teenagers imitate what they see on the catwalk," said regional
official Concha Guerra.
The mayor of Milan, Italy, Letizia
Moratti, told an Italian newspaper this week she would seek a similar
ban for her city's show unless it could find a solution to "sick"
looking models.
The Madrid show is using the body
mass index or BMI -- based on weight and height -- to measure models.
It has turned away 30 percent of women who took part in the previous
event. Medics will be on hand at the September 18-22 show to check
models.
"The restrictions could be quite a
shock to the fashion world at the beginning, but I'm sure it's
important as far as health is concerned," said Leonor Perez Pita,
director of Madrid's show, also known as the Pasarela Cibeles.
A spokeswoman for the Association of
Fashion Designers of Spain, which represents those at Madrid fashion
week, said the group supported restrictions and its concern was the
quality of collections, not the size of models.
Eating disorder activists said many
Spanish model agencies and designers oppose the ban and they had
doubts whether the new rules would be followed.
"If they don't go along with it the
next step is to seek legislation, just like with tobacco," said Carmen
Gonzalez of Spain's Association in Defense of Attention for Anorexia
and Bulimia, which has campaigned for restrictions since the 1990s. --
Reuters Limited
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