UN Used Panty Sales Exploding in Ghana

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https://www.ghanaweb.com/GhanaHomePage/business/Sale-of-used-underwears-still-booming-570911

Despite the ban on the importation of used undergarments and sanitary ware over six years ago, trade in these items are still thriving on the market.

The secondhand underwears are mostly patronised by the youth.

The ban, which came into effect in 2011, is a policy by the Ministry of Trade to prevent the influx of used undergarments considered unhygienic for consumers.

The Mirror’s investigation revealed that importers have evolved a new strategy to enable them sneak these banned items to Ghanaian markets, exposing patrons to all manner of health hazards.

The Head of Public Relations at the Ghana Standards Authority (GSA), Dr Kofi Amponsah Bediako who confirmed The Mirror’s findings, explained that the presence of the banned items on the market could be due to the inability to do physical checks as some of the undergarments were hidden in shirts.

According to Dr Amponsah-Bediako, the scanner used at the port in checking items was unable to distinguish between a panty and a cotton shirt, especially if the panties were wrapped in shirts.

“The scanners are good but the only problem is that it cannot make a distinction between a panty and a cotton shirt. Scanners help to detect some of the prohibited items but when the panties are wrapped in shirts, it’s difficult to detect unless they are separated. ” he said.

He noted that the banned goods were coming in because they are not doing random sampling, meaning they are unable to do a 100 per cent inspection limit performance.

“We need to carry on a random inspection but look at the containers, one contains many things. When you pick containers at random, you have to select the items. It difficult to bring everything out and by doing that, we cannot say it will be helpful in detecting everything but with the support of the scanners, it will also help by not delaying the importers” he stated.

The worse situation, he explained, was the porous nature of the country’s borders where people could smuggle banned items through, saying “you can easily enter, until we guard our borders with strong pillars or walls, it will be impossible practically to prevent these items”.

Agreeing that the law was not punishable enough, Dr Amponsah-Bediako said the punishment for this was not deterring people to stop. If the law was heavily punishable, it would help.

The GSA’s own studies throughout the country identified poverty and lack of education as key reasons why consumers patronise the banned goods.

Dr Amponsah- Bediako said the irony was that most consumers claimed that their husbands endorsed the used panties, indicating that ‘that is what our husbands like”.

For example, last year the GSA visited some market circles, some Bus Stops and other business environment in the country and the indication was that consumers seemed to understand that they could be infected with diseases from patronising these used undergarments.

This year, he said his outfit was yet to carry out public education in addition to holding media discussions to further create the awareness of the dangers associated with used undergarments.

He stressed the need to sustain education for the public to understand and appreciate the dangers in patronising used underwear.
 
Maybe I've been on the internet too long, but it feels like everyone has some super secret high powerlevel fetish for something. What ever happened to a poster on the wall of a chick with big tits and a round butt?

And no shes not a cat eared girl, or a futa, or a furry, or a oppai-loli or a pokefurry or a monstergirl, or whatever the hell else there is these days.

When the hell did everyone turn into deviants? Or was I just being naive?

Sorry I just had to get that out of my system.
you take the fun out of everything.
 
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Oh. I think I can explain this.

They're not buying for fetish purposes. In Ghana, lots of people are wearing your bullshit castoffs that get sent to thrift stores and various donation bins. Gross people like Alison Rapp donate bras and underwear. They also get a steady stream of clothing of all kinds that comes from various stores letting their overstock and last season's merch, plus clothing that gets messed up in some way in-store or is returned by a customer.

I would guess they're planning to launder the underwear, and that it may even be laundered when shipped (or barely used in the first place, or just a couple of returns in a big pile of Victoria's Secret leftovers that say "ho ho ho" in April). If you're in Ghana, the ability to buy a $1-5 set of imported American lingerie might seem worth it -- it's not like there's a lot in Ghana you can do to spice things up in the bedroom, and for most people, buying a brand-new bra at American department store prices would be a week's worth of income. It just wouldn't be possible.

I don't think there are many people in Ghana who have "indulge a consumerist fetish" levels of cash. If there were, the whole country would be very different. It's an economy run on bigger countries extracting natural resources and paying the locals a bare minimum. Their biggest export is cacao, but good luck finding a chocolate bar made in Ghana. They don't exist. The only chocolate in Ghana is shitty, gritty imported stuff that costs more than half a day's wages for a small bar. Not one chocolate factory exists there, because Ghanaians have plenty of gumption and work ethic -- but they don't, almost to a man, have access to industrial levels of capital. Most cacao harvesters have never tasted chocolate as a final product.

If you ever get a chance, I highly recommend going to Ghana. Of anywhere in Africa, it's one of the most functional nations and the people are generally trying very hard, making do with less than you can imagine and trying to educate their kids to do better than they did. They also have a higher opinion of the US than almost anywhere in the world. The food might take some getting used to, but it's a great "Africa for Beginners" that will broaden your perspective and make you appreciate the things you take for granted.
 
Hey you can't call it black magic anymore because that is racist, the proper term is negromancy. That being said it seems to be the hip new fetish all the kids in Ghana are doing these days. I can't find anything explaining why it's so popular though and I'm not going to google it too hard at work.

The proper term is muti you toilet-seat complexioned small-dicked cracker cuck.
 
The proper term is muti you toilet-seat complexioned small-dicked cracker cuck.

Do they practice Muti in Ghana? Might make some new branch of acrcane African panty magic.
 
Oh. I think I can explain this.

They're not buying for fetish purposes. In Ghana, lots of people are wearing your bullshit castoffs that get sent to thrift stores and various donation bins. Gross people like Alison Rapp donate bras and underwear. They also get a steady stream of clothing of all kinds that comes from various stores letting their overstock and last season's merch, plus clothing that gets messed up in some way in-store or is returned by a customer.

I would guess they're planning to launder the underwear, and that it may even be laundered when shipped (or barely used in the first place, or just a couple of returns in a big pile of Victoria's Secret leftovers that say "ho ho ho" in April). If you're in Ghana, the ability to buy a $1-5 set of imported American lingerie might seem worth it -- it's not like there's a lot in Ghana you can do to spice things up in the bedroom, and for most people, buying a brand-new bra at American department store prices would be a week's worth of income. It just wouldn't be possible.

I don't think there are many people in Ghana who have "indulge a consumerist fetish" levels of cash. If there were, the whole country would be very different. It's an economy run on bigger countries extracting natural resources and paying the locals a bare minimum. Their biggest export is cacao, but good luck finding a chocolate bar made in Ghana. They don't exist. The only chocolate in Ghana is shitty, gritty imported stuff that costs more than half a day's wages for a small bar. Not one chocolate factory exists there, because Ghanaians have plenty of gumption and work ethic -- but they don't, almost to a man, have access to industrial levels of capital. Most cacao harvesters have never tasted chocolate as a final product.

If you ever get a chance, I highly recommend going to Ghana. Of anywhere in Africa, it's one of the most functional nations and the people are generally trying very hard, making do with less than you can imagine and trying to educate their kids to do better than they did. They also have a higher opinion of the US than almost anywhere in the world. The food might take some getting used to, but it's a great "Africa for Beginners" that will broaden your perspective and make you appreciate the things you take for granted.

I thought it was for used panty pervs too at first. But then I saw a picture in the article with the panties on display in a public market.

I can understand the draw here in terms of style.

Dr Amponsah- Bediako said the irony was that most consumers claimed that their husbands endorsed the used panties, indicating that ‘that is what our husbands like”.

They want modern, stylish underwear. I guess what is locally available at an affordable price isn't as appealing as cheaper imports. But used underwear is a bad idea. You can't ascertain it's cleanliness. You'd have to boil someone's used panties to be sure.

Why would anyone donate underwear? If you care so much donate unopened packages of new underwear. It just seems so weird to me that people think it's good to do.

Don't those donation bins actually hurt local economies because it means less clothing being purchased locally? Instead of importing used panties local designers should be encouraged to make their own stylish brands at reasonable prices.
 
To be honest that's thinking they got a panty industry over there. They may not, in fact, have one, or the means to make one.
 
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Most Ghanaians make their own clothing, out of fabric that is stiffer and sturdier (longer-wearing) than anything you would find in an American shop. I'd be shocked if manufactured underwear are produced anywhere in the country on an industrial scale for local consumption.
 
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