The WHO says sugar intake is a
leading cause of obesity
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The World Health Organization has accused big
business interests in the United States of trying to
influence a new report on the dangers of consuming too
much sugar.
Fresh guidelines to be published by the organisation
on Wednesday will stress that sugar should form no more
than 10% of a person's diet.
But the US Sugar Association has told the WHO that
their recommendations are "unfair, misguided and
misleading".
Dr Pekka Puska, director of non-communicable disease
at WHO, told the BBC that big commercial interests "with
major links" were trying to interfere.
Pressure was "pretty high" he said, because the WHO
had very high status as a source on health information.
Funding threat
"I don't think this is a very wise strategy by the
industry, because the evidence is so strong and the
great public believes this message," said Dr Puska.
"I think it's bit short-sighted to deny the facts and
it would be better to collaborate.
"Food is different from tobacco. We always have to
eat, so our aim is just to change consumption from
unhealthy to healthy."
The Sugar Association, which includes such giants as
Coca-Cola, Pepsi-Cola and General Foods, is reported to
have threatened to lobby Congress to withdraw funding
from the WHO unless its sugar report is withdrawn.
It says other evidence suggests that sugar can safely
form one quarter of a person's food intake.
Responding to a draft of the WHO report last month,
the Sugar Association said there was "a preponderance of
recent scientific evidence" exonerating sugar as a cause
of obesity, diabetes, heart disease, hyperactivity and
tooth decay.