Kuwait Times

UK unveils plan to ban disposable e-cigarettes

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LONDON: The UK will introduce legislatio­n to ban disposable e-cigarettes in order to tackle a rise in youth vaping, Prime Minister Rishi Sunak announced Monday. “You talk to any parent or teacher, they will talk to you about the worrying rise in vaping amongst children,” Sunak told the media during a visit to a school in Darlington, northeast England.

“It’s right we take strong action to stamp this out, banning disposable vapes, taking powers to go after the flavors, the appearance, the packaging, where vapes are displayed in stores,” he added. “Children shouldn’t be vaping.”

Pre-filled disposable e-cigarettes, known as “puffs”, are popular with young people, can have a high nicotine content, come in many flavors and are cheap. The government cited recent figures showing the proportion of vapers under the age of 18 who use disposable­s has increased almost ninefold in the last two years.

Sunak’s government also plans to introduce fines for shops in England and Wales that sell vapes illegally to children. Health experts welcomed the proposal, with Chief Medical Officer Chris Whitty saying the legislatio­n would have “a major public health impact across many future generation­s”.

Mike McKean, from the Royal College of Paediatric­s and Child Health, praised the move, which he called “bold action”. “Banning disposable­s is a meaningful step in the right direction,” he added.

Sunak last year announced plans to eventually make the UK a smoke-free nation. His proposals would make it an offence for anyone born on or after 1 January 2009 to be sold tobacco products — effectivel­y raising the smoking age by a year each year until it applies to the whole population.

“I propose that in future, we raise the smoking age by one year every year. That means a 14-yearold today will never legally be sold a cigarette, and that they and their generation can grow up smokefree,” Sunak told his Conservati­ve party’s annual conference in October.

At present, the purchase age for tobacco products in England and Wales is 18. Sunak said that smoking was responsibl­e for one hospital admission every minute in the UK, but stopped short of pushing for a total ban on vapes, arguing it was important to keep them “for adult smokers who want to stop”.

However, some Tories are pushing back against his bid to phase out smoking, including former prime minister Liz Truss. She tweeted that the government “should abandon its profoundly unconserva­tive plans for the ban on tobacco sales,” calling it an extension of the “nanny state”.

The UK announceme­nt follows the French parliament’s unanimous vote in December to ban single-use e-cigarettes, although the law still needs backing from France’s upper house Senate and clearance from the EU Commission.

Germany has also signaled an intent to take action while Belgium is awaiting the EU’s approval for a ban. The sale of all vapes is currently banned in over 30 countries, with 79 other countries regulating them through legislatio­n, while 84 countries have no bans or regulation­s in place, according to the World Health Organizati­on. — AFP

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