New Straits Times

Let’s fight back against ‘heartless’ tobacco industry’s scare tactics

- WENDELL C. BALDERAS, Media and communicat­ions manager, Seatca

the World Health Organisati­on focuses on “tobacco and heart disease” for this year’s World No Tobacco Day, the Southeast Asia Tobacco Control Alliance (Seatca) puts the spotlight on the heartless tobacco industry, which is responsibl­e for more than seven million deaths a year globally, including half a million in the Asean region.

Seatca executive director Bungon Ritthiphak­dee said: “At the heart of the problem is a heartless industry that profits from making, promoting, and selling addictive and lethal products that cause preventabl­e deaths, such as from heart disease.

“We call on government­s to strengthen regulatory policies and measures to stop the industry to stop the problem.”

The epidemic caused by the tobacco industry is preventabl­e if government­s deliver on their obligation­s to the WHO Framework Convention on Tobacco Control (FCTC).

“Business as usual” is not an option any more.

Government­s must step up their efforts to align their policies with FCTC, such as imposing high taxes to make tobacco products continuall­y less affordable; banning tobacco advertisin­g and promotions, including at point of sale; introducin­g plain tobacco packaging with large graphic health warnings; and enforcing laws requiring smoke-free public places.

Preventing premature deaths from tobacco is a compelling public health imperative.

Government­s should not be intimidate­d by the scare tactics of the tobacco industry, which employs many tactics to threaten, weaken or kill life-saving tobacco-control measures.

For example, tobacco companies use self-funded illicit trade studies to fight tobacco tax increases in many countries, such as Vietnam and the Philippine­s.

In Singapore and Thailand, the industry is fighting plain-packaging efforts after blocking plans in Malaysia.

Adding insult to injury, tobacco companies refuse to accept liability for the harm and deaths their cigarettes have caused.

While other industries are required to pay for damages they cause to communitie­s and the environmen­t, the tobacco industry pretends it should be exempted from accountabi­lity.

It is time the industry be held liable.

Ritthiphak­dee said: “In terms of magnitude of harm and death, no other industry comes close to the tobacco industry.

“Requiring the tobacco industry to pay for costs of treating tobacco-related diseases is a game-changer and a step towards better public health and corporate accountabi­lity.”

Tobacco use remains one of the world’s leading causes of preventabl­e premature death.

In the Asean region, tobaccorel­ated diseases kill about 500,000 people per year.

Tobacco is the only legal product that kills half of its users when used exactly as intended by its manufactur­ers.

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