http://www.rense.com/general27/euro.htm

Most Of Europe's Health Supplement 
Stores Will Be Shut Down
By Christopher Booker 
The Telegraph - London 
(first published 7-21-02)

>From Jane Jones
[EMAIL PROTECTED]
7-25-2

Also visit: The Silent majority
http://www.silentmajority.co.uk/index.html
and http://www.vitamins-for-all.org/english/default.html



Drugs Law Is Bitter Pill For Health Shops  Representatives of Britain's
2,000 health shops have been told in Brussels that there is now no chance
of stopping an EU directive which will close most of them down.  This is
because it is part of an avalanche of EU legislation which is being
"fast-tracked" to give eastern European countries a chance to comply with
it before they join an enlarged Union.  There are several odd features
about this "Herbal Medicines Products" directive, for which
pharmaceutical companies have been lobbying behind the scenes for years. 
Although it is a British initiative, championed by our Medicines Control
Agency, it seeks to apply to herbal remedies the principle of continental
law that things can only be allowed when they are specifically
authorised. This reverses the British tradition that everything is
allowed unless specifically prohibited.  Under the directive such herbal
remedies as Hypericum, Rhodiola and Echinacea, used by five million
people in Britain for a wide range of conditions, could only be sold if
they had been through the MCA's prohibitively expensive licensing
procedures.  Thousands of safe herbal products will thus have to be
removed from the market, which is why many health shops will be forced to
close.  What makes this even odder is that the MCA tried it on before,
when in 1994 it proposed a statutory instrument which it claimed was
necessary to implement a 1965 Brussels directive, passed three years
before Britain's Medicines Act specifically exempted herbal medicines
from licensing requirements.  When the European Commission explained that
this was not what the directive intended, the MCA was told, after heated
discussion in Cabinet, to drop its proposal. Now seven years later, the
MCA has got its way, by successfully lobbying for an EU directive.  There
are no health reasons for banning the 3,000 herbal preparations currently
on sale in Britain. Almost all adverse reactions linked to herbal
remedies (infinitely fewer than those due to synthetic drugs made by
pharmaceutical firms) are caused by preparations made up by Chinese
practitioners. These are specifically exempted from the directive.      

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