Israeli firms to shun skinny fashion models (Reuters) Updated: 2006-09-21 09:30 Adi Barkan, a leading fashion
photographer, said he had secured commitments from firms that account for 60
percent of advertising volume in Israel to turn away models whose body mass
index -- the ratio of height to weight -- is less than 18.
"The average BMI among our models is 14. The new pact comes into effect next
week, when we expect all the major fashion agencies to sign on," Barkan told
Reuters on Wednesday. He said underweight models would have a grace period to
catch up.
The agreement was confirmed by the participating companies in statements to
Maariv newspaper. It follows on the heels of a ban on too-skinny models from the
prestigious Madrid fashion week last week, which prompted calls from British
Culture Secretary Tessa Jowell for similar steps in her country.
According to Barkan, Israel has the fourth-highest rate of anorexia in the
industrialised world, a phenomenon that he blamed on the clashing cultural
forces in the Jewish state.
"On the one hand, we want to be America, but on the other hand, we live in
the Levant, with all the pressures and expectations that entails for young women
when it comes to their appearance," he said.
Legislation that would enforce the BMI threshold throughout Israel's fashion
industry has passed a first reading in parliament and could be ratified by
year's end, Barkan said.
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