The Guardian (Nigeria)

FCCPC to end negative impact of tobacco on economy, productivi­ty

- By Adaku Onyenuchey­a

THE Federal Competitio­n and Consumer Protection Commission ( FCCPC) said the country could no longer turn a blind eye to the far- reaching consequenc­es of the tobacco industry on economic growth, social developmen­t and national productivi­ty. This is just as the Federal Ministry of Health and Social Welfare said every $ 1 a country gains from tobacco, $ 3 more is expended on healthcare costs because of its ill effects.

This was disclosed, yesterday, at the formal launch of the FCCPC tobacco control advocacy campaign, tagged, ‘ Don't Burn Their Future’, in Lagos.

The Coordinati­ng Minister of Health and Social Welfare, Prof. Ali Pate, said tobacco harms national economies, sustainabl­e developmen­t and environmen­t as well as re- enforces, recycles and perpetuate­s poverty, especially among low- income earners who invest their money to service their tobacco addiction.

He stressed that the study by the Nigerian Centre for the Study of the Economies of Africa showed that the burden of tobacco on the country's healthcare system is NN634 billion, of which N 526.6 billion is tobacco- related treatment costs.

The minister said there is a need to ensure the tobacco industry is strictly regulated by the country's legislatio­n and global best practices. Pate said the tobacco industry, in ensuring that its business remains profitable, has harnessed its energy in flooding the markets with newer products, while circumvent­ing the law on tobacco advertisem­ent, promotions, celebrity endorsemen­ts, corporate social responsibi­lity and recruitmen­t of new users to replace the old tobacco users who are in transition to premature mortality.

Pate commended the FCCPC'S legal action and sanctionin­g of British American Tobacco Nigeria ( BATN) for indulging in antitobacc­o control and anticompet­ition practices.

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