"The cost of providing breast milk substitutes to all women needing them in Tanzania, for example, dwarfs the present health budget in Tanzania and dwarfs all of Unicef's funds in Tanzania for the next two years,"
12.
Promotion, donations or the supply of breast milk substitutes at low cost for infants under the age of six months are strictly prohibited both in and outside the health care system, according to the country's Code of Marketing of Foods for Infants and Young Children and Related Products.
13.
After intense campaigning by IBFAN, including organising consumer boycotts against the likes of Nestl? whose subtle yet effective campaigns were undermining breast feeding, the World Health Assembly of the World Health Organization, adopted the International Code of Marketing on Breast Milk Substitutes the first such code designed to control widespread marketing abuses by baby food companies.