It's looking Better -- In SILvation, Douglas H

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CODEX SNAFU-EURO COURT SAYS NO

PRESS RELEASE -- Solari Action Network Forum Index  -> Health

For immediate release 5 April 2005 

ADVOCATE GENERAL FINDS FOOD SUPPLEMENTS DIRECTIVE INVALID UNDER EU LAW 

ALLIANCE FOR NATURAL HEALTH SET TO WIN ITS LANDMARK CHALLENGE TO THE EU FOOD 
SUPPLEMENTS DIRECTIVE 

 There was tremendous news today for the millions of people in Europe who 
choose to use food supplements. Following a landmark challenge in the European 
Courts of Justice (ECJ) brought by the Alliance for Natural Health and 
Nutri-Link Ltd to the contentious Food Supplements Directive, which effectively 
proposed to ban 75% of vitamin and mineral forms, Advocate General Geelhoed, 
the senior adviser to the ECJ, gave his Opinion in favour of the Alliance's 
case. 

 What does this mean? That the chances of consumers being able to continue 
using the natural food supplements they believe are beneficial to their health 
are now greatly increased. There has been uproar about the proposed EU ban, and 
maybe, against the odds, the consumer is going to come out on top in what is a 
remarkable modern day case of David and Goliath. 

 In a statement released in Luxembourg today at 0830 GMT, the Advocate General 
concluded that: 

 * The Food Supplements Directive infringes the principle of proportionality 
because basic principles of Community law, such as the requirements of legal 
protection, of legal certainty and of sound administration have not properly 
been taken into account.  
 * It is therefore invalid under EU law. 

 It should be stressed that the Advocate General's pronouncement is not a 
ruling. That will come from the ECJ judges, later - probably around June. But 
typically, in the vast majority of cases, the Court Judgment follows the 
recommendations of the Advocate General. 

 If the Advocate General's recommendations are adopted, in effect, the ban on 
vitamin and mineral forms not included on the EU's 'Positive list,' due to come 
into effect on 1 August 2005, will be declared illegal.  In essence, the 
positive list of allowable nutrient forms will be deemed to be too narrow, too 
restrictive, and based on flawed science. 

 This would avoid the totally irrational situations that the Food Supplements 
Directive would otherwise create. For example, synthetically produced selenium 
would have been allowed on the positive list, while the natural source found in 
Brazil nuts would not; synthetic forms of Vitamin E (often used in 'adverse' 
vitamin studies reported in the media) would be allowed, but the natural, most 
beneficial food forms would not. 

 An outstanding moment for the Alliance for Natural Health 

 The Alliance for Natural Health (ANH) is a Europe-wide professional 
organisation dedicated to ensuring that good science and good law are applied 
to regulation affecting the leading edge of natural health.  If the Advocate 
General's recommendations are endorsed by the ECJ judges, it will represent the 
culmination of three years dogged determination, dedication and hard work on 
the part of ANH and its many supporters around the world. 

 'It is commendable that the EU Advocate General has seen through the flawed 
science and law of the Food Supplements Directive and reached his 
recommendations today,' said Dr. Robert Verkerk, Executive Director of the ANH. 
'All that ANH is campaigning and working cooperatively for is the right for 
consumers to have access to safe natural healthcare and for legislation to be 
based on good science and good law. This is a great day for the tens of 
millions of people who believe passionately in the benefits of natural, 
preventative healthcare.' 

 David C. Hinde, Solicitor and ANH Legal Director, added: 'This is a very 
significant Opinion in a landmark case. What we want to see in the EU is the 
Food Supplements Directive doing the job for which it was created which is to 
provide a "safe harbour" for food supplements so that they are not classified 
as drugs, and to promote their availability across the EU. Advocate General 
Geelhoed is the most senior Advocate General at the ECJ and his considered 
reasoning vindicates ANH's legal analysis and position. We are very optimistic 
that the Court will adopt his recommendations.' 

 Supporting safe supplements 

 ANH supports many aspects of the Directive, and firmly endorses the banning of 
ingredients that are patently not safe, stating that existing UK and EU food 
law already provides perfectly effective protection from unsafe products 
getting onto the market. Furthermore, ANH says that it is not scientifically 
rational to classify an ingredient as being unsafe without taking dosage levels 
into account, something that was not a condition of being admitted onto the 
positive list. 

 ANH believes that a far more appropriate system for banning any substances 
that might pose a risk to health would be to produce a 'Negative list' for 
ingredients where there was proper evidence of lack of safety. The system 
proposed by the EU was going to ban ingredients on the basis that companies did 
not have the financial capacity to meet the high data threshold required for 
the scientific dossiers demanded by EU authorities. In this way, ingredients 
that have been part of the human diet for thousands of years, and which are 
increasingly difficult to derive from conventional foods, would be lost, and 
would not be able to be supplemented.  

 The future of the leading edge of natural health secured 

 Drawing its support European-wide from consumers, manufacturers, retailers, 
practitioners and some of the leading experts in nutritional medicine, ANH has 
taken on the Goliath of the European Commission and those that support the 
unscientific and unlawful ban in the Food Supplements Directive, to protect the 
interests of everyone concerned with the leading-edge of food supplements and 
natural healthcare. 

 'None of the major EU countries felt the need to oppose our application for a 
declaration that the ban on vitamins and minerals in the Food Supplements 
Directive was unlawful,' added Anthony Haynes, Technical Director of Nutri-Link 
Ltd., a UK food supplements company that brought the legal challenge jointly 
with ANH. 'It's bizarre how this regulation got this far.' 

 A wide welcome across the industry if the ban is overturned 

 Greg Watts, Chief Executive of Ultralife, a manufacturer of leading-edge food 
supplements, said: 'This is very encouraging news. If the ban came into force 
we would have to reformulate down to simpler, more basic products that 
consumers and practitioners find are less effective.' 

 Dr Damien Downing, a medical doctor and one of the UK's leading practitioners 
in nutritional medicine, said: 'Practitioners of nutritional therapy, and there 
are thousands of them in the UK, largely use leading-edge food supplements. If 
these nutrient forms remain, we can continue to treat our patients with 
meaningful solutions and provide the products that we know are so beneficial. A 
ban would in one fell swoop remove the vital tools of practitioners' trade.' 

 Sara Novakovic, owner of Oliver's Wholefood Store in Richmond, Surrey, said: 
'At last it is now highly likely we can continue to offer the products that our 
customers ask for and want, rather than have to remove them all from the 
shelves for no good reason and supply them with inferior quality alternatives.' 

 The end of the beginning 

 This is just the beginning for the Alliance for Natural Health. Regulatory and 
industry pressure through the EU Food Supplements Directive was always likely 
to translate globally, particularly to the US, through Codex and the World 
Health Organisation. Without having to justify any health hazard, and without 
considering any benefits, safety has been used as a reason to restrict the 
availability of natural food products. 

 'Yet food supplements are the safest things that people put into their mouths 
- considerably safer even than conventional foods', said Dr Robert Verkerk. 
'With rapidly declining vitamin and mineral content in fruit vegetables and 
other foods, and continuing increases in degenerative diseases such as heart 
disease and cancer in the West, this has always been a very big issue worth 
fighting for.' 

 'Fundamentally, an amended Directive would help to slow down the agenda of the 
Codex Alimentarius Commission to export worldwide an onerous, EU-style regime 
for food supplements.' 

 David Hinde added. 'The ANH is now going to be working on getting a proper 
procedure in place for the Food Supplements Directive and in addition, the next 
challenges will be on legislation proposing to reduce dosages to ineffective 
levels, and to restrict other nutrient forms such as amino acids, enzymes and 
plant nutrients. Traditional herbal remedies are also under threat. In its 
work, the Alliance for Natural Health will continue its thorough, professional 
approach based, as always, on 'good science, good law.




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