The Ministry of Health and Family Welfare waded into a Twitter controversy on Monday after it shared a stock photograph that seemed to indicate that a vegetarian diet is the only way to be healthy. The image shared on the micro-blogging platform showed a curvy woman on one side and a leaner built on the other, with indications of the kind of food each consumes.
In the curvy woman’s body, sharing space with junk food like soft drinks, donuts and french fries were photographs of food items with known benefits like meat, eggs and healthy fats. The leaner body was filled with plants and vegetables. The tweet was deleted soon after, but stayed in circulation on Twitter courtesy multiple shares and comments.
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The tweet attracted criticism for indicating that a non-vegetarian food is necessarily unhealthy, even though science does not suggest that. Meat politics has, in fact, been a staple for the ruling Bharatiya Janata Party – its crackdown on beef has routinely extended to other meat as well, even though surveys have shown that a majority of India is non-vegetarian. In particular, Twitter users picked up on the insinuation that egg, a rich source of protein and other minerals, is unhealthy.
There was also much outrage over the Ministry’s seeming body-shaming.
Several people also pointed out that the Ministry had merely lifted a stock image from a website to promote its cause.
So, Ministry of Health @MoHFW_INDIA picks up a stock photo which portray eggs, poultry, meat and bread as unhealthy and tweets that as health advice.
— Pratik Sinha (@free_thinker) April 23, 2018
Link to the stock photo website: https://t.co/cTUlaoTPuC
And they've quietly deleted their tweet now. pic.twitter.com/f7GhiLhgln
Egg is unhealthy?!
— Shirish Kunder (@ShirishKunder) April 23, 2018
Now that we are done rewriting history, let's rewrite science. pic.twitter.com/EQxVOOX72K
Is Egg unhealthy? If so, Dhara Singh, Dharmendra, Sachin, Saina etc should all apologise to 1.3 Billion Indians for promoting this fake news created by NECC. pic.twitter.com/iNq6E3TsFV
— Unofficial Sususwamy (@swamv39) April 23, 2018
Systematically creating health associations with vegetarianism. Depicting egg, meat and poultry as unhealthy, pairing with fast food choices such as soda. Focus should be on a balanced diet. Where is the evidence on this? We know what narrative you are weaving here @MoHFW_INDIA https://t.co/v0IShu3cNp
— Dr. Sumaiya Shaikh (@Neurophysik) April 23, 2018
Actually, the thin woman has a badly-balanced died (not enough protein & carbs. Why are eggs on the 'bad' body?). Plus fat (which the woman on the right isn't. She's curvy) doesn't necessarily mean unfit, but and thank you, Govt of India, for fatshaming us. https://t.co/2saKQApv8s
— Deepanjana (@dpanjana) April 23, 2018
.@MoHFW_INDIA Here is the fat shaming pic which has been deleted by the Ministry of Health and Welfare. pic.twitter.com/CI0VXvMfwd
— Aparna (@FuschiaScribe) April 23, 2018
You want the country to be fit and healthy, @MoHFW_INDIA ?
— Adi Na Dhin Dha (@Brewkenstein) April 23, 2018
Make fitness test mandatory for all MPs and ministers with health reports available on the public forum. Get your own people in shape to walk 100 metres before you start fat shaming people.
Some people saw the humour in the situation.
Ofcourse bread and butter are unhealthy. You tell me Where does butter come from? Milk. Where milk comes from? Cow. What does cow eat? Plants. What does plants have? Leaf. What does leaf rhyme with? Beef. And we all know how unhealthy beef is.
— Mr Peanutbutter (@illogicalhooman) April 23, 2018
Where's the gaumutr in the healthy body?
— Quantumly Entwined (@SpaceCrazy) April 23, 2018