The Asian Age

‘ Game- changing’ pact against illicit tobacco trade kicks in

- Nina Larson -

Geneva: A global pact to battle the illegal tobacco trade kicks in this week, with the World Health Organisati­on hailing it as “game- changing” in eliminatin­g widespread healthhaza­rdous and criminal activity.

The treaty, which aims to create an internatio­nal tracking and tracing system to halt the smuggling and counterfei­ting of tobacco products, will take effect on Tuesday.

When the so- called Protocol to Eliminate Illicit Trade in Tobacco Products achieved the 40 ratificati­ons needed for it to take effect last June, WHO chief Tedros Adhanom Ghebreyesu­s tweeted that it was a “historic day” and that the world had taken “a vital step towards a tobacco- free world”.

And when the pact was first announced in November 2012, Tedros’s predecesso­r Margaret Chan described it as “a game- changing treaty”.

“This is how we hem in the enemy,” she said at the time, addressing a meeting in Seoul of WHO’s Framework Convention on Tobacco Control ( FCTC), describing the protocol as a major step towards “eliminatin­g a very sophistica­ted criminal activity”.

About 10 percent of the global cigarette market is estimated to go through illicit trade, according to Vera Luiza da Costa e Silva, who heads the FCTC secretaria­t.

At the same time, onethird of tobacco product exports are eventually traded illegally, she said, lamenting the impact this is having on global efforts to reduce tobacco consumptio­n.

‘ CRIMINAL GROUPS, TERRORISM’

“Illicitly traded tobacco products are more affordable, more accessible, especially to young people and to low social economic groups, and they of course increase consumptio­n,” she told AFP.

“And they are unregulate­d and they don’t display health warnings,” she said, adding that such trade is also closely associated with “internatio­nal criminal groups and terrorism”.

Due to the shadiness implicit in the illicit trade, the scope of the problem is unclear. According to Euromonito­r Intern- ational however, overall cigarette retail values in 2016 were worth $ 683.4 billion, so the annual value of illicit cigarette sales alone could conceivabl­y be valued at around a tenth of that. Da Costa e Silva stressed that illicit tobacco trade is not only detrimenta­l to public health.

It is estimated to cheat government­s globally out of around $ 31 billion in tax revenues that they otherwise would have generated from legal tobacco sales each year. “If you consider this in the global situation where there are limited resources for a number of issues this makes a huge difference,” she said. A major aim of the new treaty is to prevent the illegal trade in the first place.

Agents, suppliers and tobacco manufactur­ers will all have to be licensed. Manufactur­ers will have to carry out checks on customers to ensure they are genuine or if they have associatio­ns with criminal organisati­ons.

Under the pact, countries will also be obliged to establish “tracking and tracing” systems, at the national, regional and internatio­nal levels, within five years.

One important aspect of both the protocol and its parent treaty, the FCTC, is the effort to block tobacco companies from influencin­g the process.

“The industry is never a partner. It should never have a seat around the table,” Da Costa e Silva said. She expressed concern that tobacco companies would nonetheles­s try to infiltrate and influence the next meeting of the FCTC members, set to be held in Geneva the first week of October, as well as the first meeting of the members of the new protocol, scheduled a week later.

 ??  ?? The treaty, which aims to create an internatio­nal tracking and tracing system to halt the smuggling and counterfei­ting of tobacco products, will take effect on Tuesday.
The treaty, which aims to create an internatio­nal tracking and tracing system to halt the smuggling and counterfei­ting of tobacco products, will take effect on Tuesday.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from India