France
may be home to some of the world's finest wines but it could be about to
join the tiny club of Muslim states that forbid their promotion on the
internet.
Winemakers and other players in the drinks industry are fighting to
avert a ban on advertising, sales and even vineyard websites that has
been looming ever since a court ruled that the internet should be
included in France's strict laws regarding alcohol advertising.
The Heineken beer company was forced by the ruling last February to
block French access to its corporate site. Since then, some of the
biggest drinks brands have shut out French visitors for fear of
prosecution. Today in France, the sight of a bottle of wine has
become as offensive as a picture of war or pornography, said Daniel
Lorson, a spokesman for CIVC, the industry body of champagne producers.
The industry complains that it is being demonised and that an internet
ban would penalise hugely one of the glories of the French economy and
the national heritage. A click from France on Courvoisier cognac, for
example, elicits the message: Sorry, the regulations of your country
do not authorise us to give you access to our site.
Even the alcohol-fuelled world of sport has not been left unscathed.
When Liverpool played Marseilles in this week's Champions League match,
the logo of Carlsberg, the team's main sponsor, was absent from their
shirts, while rugby union's Heineken Cup is simply called the European
Rugby trophy in France.
Frédéric Delesque, the marketing director of Camus Cognac, which has
also bowed to the law and blocks French visitors said: There
are three countries in the world which ban the discussion of alcohol:
Iran, Afghanistan and France. It is a pity for the image of our
products.
The Evin law, passed in 1991, limits the advertising of alcoholic drinks
only to the press, the radio and on posters. Since the world wide web
did not exist then, it is not approved for drink advertising. The court
upheld that argument in the Heineken case, but added that it should be
clarified.
The world of alcohol fears that the inevitable jokes produced by the
country's comedians are a little too close to reality. Will it soon be
illegal, for example, to mention such place names as Bordeaux, Burgundy,
Champagne or Cognac in public?
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