The Sunday Guardian

India to quiz Philip Morris on marketing of Marlboro

- REUTERS

NEW DELHI: India plans to seek an explanatio­n from Philip Morris Internatio­nal Inc about its marketing practices after Reuters reported that the tobacco giant used tactics that government officials say flout the country’s law, a health ministry official said on Friday. Philip Morris advertises Marlboro cigarettes, the world’s best-selling brand, at tobacco shops in India and distribute­s free smokes at nightclubs and bars frequented by young people to promote the brand, Reuters reported earlier this week. The strategy is laid out in hundreds of pages of internal documents reviewed by Reuters that cover the period from 2009 to 2016. (reut.rs/2uuye5Y) Indian government officials previously have said these marketing activities violate the country’s Cigarettes and Other Tobacco Products Act and its accompanyi­ng rules, but companies get away with it because enforcemen­t is weak. The government now plans to write letters to Philip Morris’ India unit as well as other tobacco companies and take “action as per law”, said Arun Kumar Jha, a federal health ministry official who oversees tobacco control in the country. Jha added that the ministry will also ask states to take action against advertisem­ents that violate regulation­s. “Our basic objective is to reduce deaths caused by tobacco,” Jha told Reuters.Philip Morris previously described its advertisin­g as “compliant with Indian law”. It did not respond to a request for comment on Friday.India has about 100 million smokers. Of those, about two-thirds smoke traditiona­l hand-rolled cigarettes, government data showed.

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