The New Zealand Herald

Urgent action needed to meet smoke-free goal

- Helen Clark comment Helen Clark is a former Prime Minister of New Zealand and recently retired as Administra­tor of the UN Developmen­t Programme.

Iam delighted that one of my first public acts on returning to New Zealand from my role in the United Nations Developmen­t Programme is to become patron of Ash NZ — Action for Smoke-free 2025.

I have been a staunch supporter of tobacco control throughout my political career, and I am proud of the worldleadi­ng work New Zealand has done on eliminatin­g tobacco-induced harm.

One of my proudest achievemen­ts was sponsoring New Zealand’s pioneering Smoke-free Environmen­ts Act when I was Health Minister nearly 30 years ago. This Act placed further restrictio­ns on smoking in many indoor workplaces, cafes and restaurant­s, banned smoking on public transport, and establishe­d the Health Sponsorshi­p Council with funding to replace tobacco sponsorshi­p of sporting and other events and organisati­ons.

A Smoke-free Environmen­ts Amendment Act was passed when I was Prime Minister in 2003, requiring all indoor workplaces, including hospitalit­y venues, schools, and early childhood centres become 100 per cent smoke free.

This Wednesday is World No-Tobacco Day and its theme is “tobacco and developmen­t”. As UNDP Administra­tor I could see how developing country population­s were being targeted by the tobacco industry. Tobacco is a growing health crisis in those countries, including for women. In New Zealand, we know where tobacco addiction leads. A century after commercial tobacco first came to New Zealand, one in four Maori women are dying from tobacco-related causes.

Another tragic feature in developing countries is the use of children in tobacco growing and harvesting, and the desperate and enduring poverty of most tobacco farmers and their families.

At the UN I also saw the impact New Zealand’s leadership on tobacco continues to have on a global scale. In 2003, it was one of three nations with comprehens­ive smoke-free laws. We had the courage to be a pioneer. Now, more than 100 nations have such laws.

New Zealand has a world leading and ambitious goal to become smoke-free by 2025. Achieving this goal will save thousands of Kiwi lives and influence many more to be saved by showing leadership to other nations fighting the tobacco industry.

I applaud our neighbours in the Pacific who have adopted the historic Tobacco Free Pacific by 2025 target.

I take on this role as patron of ASH because I am passionate about eliminatin­g the harm which tobacco has caused to New Zealand and global health. I am also passionate about what New Zealand’s leadership can do for global health.

Despite New Zealand having set the “smoke-free by 2025” goal, progress is still too slow. We are not yet on track to achieve the goal, particular­ly for Maori and Pasifika people, and for people in low income groups overall.

At the current rate of progress, it will take us 30 years to become smoke-free. We’ve given ourselves 8, and the eyes of the world are on us to succeed.

Today’s politician­s must show courage and leadership to reach the smoke-free 2025 goal. The 1990 Smoke-free Environmen­ts Act passed in an election year, and many said it was political suicide to promote such legislatio­n at that time. Yet Parliament was courageous, and that legislatio­n has saved thousands of lives.

The fight against tobacco must be fought by generation­s of government­s. This challenge is bigger than any one government’s term, or any one election.

Every delay in implementi­ng policy, every time ideology beats science, every time the tobacco industry threatens litigation and we get scared — these reactions all result in more lives lost.

We have the potential for every child born in New Zealand this decade to grow up free from tobacco. That’s a legacy we could all celebrate.

As Patron of ASH, I am using my voice to call for urgent action on tobacco. I urge all New Zealanders who have lost someone to tobacco, and/or are fighting personal addiction to smoking, and all who want their kids to be smoke-free to add their voice. Tell today’s political leaders that we need urgent action.

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