India: Pictorial Warnings On Cigarette Packs
Main Category: Smoking / Quit SmokingArticle Date: 02 Dec 2007 - 12:00 PDT
The central government is set to enforce pictorial warnings of oral cancer on all packets of cigarettes manufactured in the country by early 2008.
India, a signatory to the WHO Framework Convention on Tobacco Control, had issued an order earlier this year stating that all cigarette packets will have warning labels like "Tobacco Kills" in both English and regional languages, and specifying: "Your smoking kills babies, Tobacco causes slow, painful death, or tobacco kills 2,500 Indians every day."
Manufacturers found flouting the rules would face up to two years in prison and a fine.
India has a poor record of implementing government leglistion on tobacco control. Smokers ignored an order, issued three years ago, against smoking in public places like playgrounds, clubs, restaurants and railway stations.
250 million people in India use tobacco, resulting in the death of over 900,000 people every year and it is estimated that ten million children below the age of 15 either smoke or consume tobacco.
Meanwhile, the tobacco industry argues that India does have strong tobacco control policies, namely, a ban on advertisements in public places and in media (TV, print and radio). They say the best form of discouraging people from smoking or chewing tobacco would be to educate them. They fear "pictorial warnings" would leave a bad taste in the mouth of the consumer.
But Gupta thinks otherwise. He said there are many countries like Thailand, Singapore and Brazil that have adopted strong tobacco control policies for many years, yet no reports have come forth showing a drop in tobacco generated revenues in these countries.
Gupta said, "These products are taxed at an extremely low level. Only by adopting comprehensive tobacco control strategies can the central and state government improve public health."
http://www.ash.org.uk
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Stubbing Out The Cig Butt
posted by Arjun on 19 Mar 2008 at 4:52 amRight idea, though wrong way of implementation, for a country like India, even though its been done using the defence that a large cross section of the smoking public in India is illiterate.
The truth of the matter is that a large section, be it literate/illiterate/educated or otherwise smoke not by buying packs of cigarettes, but buying them loosely from panwaalahs/cigarette vendors.
How would the message get across to individual smokers that prefer not to buy whole packs of cigarettes?
The respective Govts. need to enforce laws where selling of cigarettes loosely would be illegal, or rather buying only packed cigarettes would be the option available to people, but that would not serve the purpose in a country like India where prices of cigarettes when buying as complete pack becomes prohibitive, and thus would work against tobacco companies, which have a powerful lobby working for them, and would refuse to take any hit in margins due to a prohibitive policy of this nature.
Selling cigarettes loose from packs is something that works only in some third world countries, due to the lack of buying power of smokers and power of cartels working away at making cheap, counterfeit, and spurious cigarette sticks and selling them as renowned brands, thus making a fast buck in the process.
A reality check for all policy makers wanting to effect policy changes for the betterment of society.
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