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Ireland
Mulls 'Fat Tax'
to Curb Obesity Levels
Ireland,
noted for fried breakfasts of epic proportions, is chewing over
the possibility of a special tax on fatty foods to tackle rising
obesity levels.
Faced with an epidemic of expanding
waistlines as the Irish enjoy unprecedented prosperity, Health
Minister Micheal Martin confirmed he was "very tentatively" examining
slapping a levy on high-fat comestibles.
A proliferation of restaurants
and fast-food joints during the country's celebrated "Celtic Tiger"
boom of the late 1990s and an increasingly sedentary national
lifestyle are among factors blamed for a rise of nearly 70 percent
in the number of those overweight or obese over the last decade.
"Some 60 percent of our population
is now either overweight or obese and we would welcome any initiative
(by the government) to tackle the problem," Michael O'Shea, chief
executive of the Irish Heart Foundation, told Reuters.
Figures earlier this year showed
14 percent of Irish men and 12 percent of Irish women were obese.
Some 32 percent of Irish children were overweight and 10 percent
classified obese.
News the government is eyeing high-fat
snacks follows recent moves to crack down on alcohol abuse --
including a ban on pub "happy hours" -- and a national furor over
plans to prohibit smoking in bars and restaurants from next January.
Reference
Source 89
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