Business World

India’s Delhi government tells Philip Morris and others to remove all ads

-

NEW DELHI — The state government in India’s capital told Philip Morris Internatio­nal, Inc. and other tobacco companies on Saturday to remove all advertisem­ents from tobacco shops in the city, warning them of legal action if they do not comply.

The order, sent by Delhi state’s chief tobacco control officer S. K. Arora, comes days after Reuters reported that Philip Morris was promoting Marlboro cigarettes, the world’s best-selling brand, by advertisin­g them at tobacco shops and distributi­ng free cigarette samples. Government officials say such tactics flout the law.

The strategy was laid out in hundreds of pages of internal Philip Morris documents reviewed by Reuters that cover the period from 2009 to 2016.

Indian officials have previously said tobacco advertisin­g using brand names or promotiona­l slogans is illegal under the country’s Cigarettes and Other Tobacco Products Act and its accompanyi­ng rules. But Philip Morris and India’s leading cigarette maker ITC Ltd say they comply with regulation­s and that the law allows advertisin­g inside a kiosk.

Arora said the federal health ministry had told him that all brand advertisem­ents, irrespecti­ve of where they were placed, were not allowed in the country.

Philip Morris and ITC did not immediatel­y respond to requests for comment on Saturday.

Tobacco companies have continued to advertise at sale points despite repeated warnings from the Delhi state government in recent years. Philip Morris has been paying a monthly fee to some tobacco vendors to display the company’s colorful advertisem­ents, the Reuters investigat­ion found.

Arora also told Reuters he “will investigat­e and conduct raids” to check on distributi­on of free cigarettes at social events. “If violations are found, action as per law will be taken,” Arora said.

India enacted its national tobacco control law in 2003 and has since added rules to strengthen it, but government officials say companies get away with violations because law enforcemen­t is weak.

The federal health ministry on Friday said it planned to seek an explanatio­n from Philip Morris and other tobacco companies about their marketing practices following the Reuters investigat­ion that was published earlier this week. Philip Morris and ITC did not respond to requests for comment. —

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from Philippines