Business Day

Tobacco laws ‘will harm spazas, jobs’

- Tamar Kahn Science and Health Writer

Informal township traders, farmers and unionised workers have joined the industry pushback against the government’s proposed new tobacco laws, saying they will harm businesses and lead to job losses.

Informal township traders, farmers and unionised workers have joined the industry pushback against the government’s proposed new tobacco laws, saying they will harm businesses and lead to job losses.

Health minister Aaron Motsoaledi released the Control of Tobacco Products and Electronic Delivery Systems Bill for public comment on May 9.

The three-month period for submission­s closes on August 9, after which the bill will be submitted to parliament. The bill seeks to tighten the marketing and sale of tobacco products, including e-cigarettes and newgenerat­ion products that are heated rather than burnt.

It includes provisions that introduce plain packaging, ban point-of-sale advertisin­g and displays, and scrap the sale of single cigarettes.

More than 42,100 South Africans die from tobacco-related diseases each year — about 10.1% of all deaths — according to the Tobacco Atlas. It has found that more than 55,000 children from 10 to 14 years old smoke, and that 6,321,000 people 15 and older smoke daily.

The Tobacco Institute of Southern Africa (Tisa) and the Vapour Product Associatio­n (VPA) have warned of job losses if the bill is passed in its current form and urged the government to focus on stamping out the illicit cigarette market instead.

Illicit cigarettes cost the fiscus R27bn in lost revenue between 2010 and 2016, according to Tisa, which represents tobacco growers and manufactur­ers. The VPA represents e-cigarette retailers.

AgriSA, the Food and Allied Workers Union (Fawu) and the SA Spaza and Tuckshop Associatio­n (Sasta) said on Tuesday that the bill would “devastate SA’s agricultur­e and township businesses”.

In a joint statement, they said the measures in the bill would put thousands of law-abiding spaza shop owners and hawkers out of business and drive 80% of tobacco sales into the hands of criminals.

The plain packaging provisions would boost the illicit cigarette trade, they said.

The bill would end the legal production of cigarettes in SA, leading to an estimated 7,000 job losses, and a shutdown of hundreds of farms, they said.

“Members will be asked to sell completely unbranded legal cigarettes in packs of 20 for R30 at a time. Why would anyone buy 20 plain and unbranded cigarettes for R30 when they will have the option of buying up to six packs of unbranded illegal cigarettes for the same price,” said Sasta president Rose Nkosi.

The eKasi Entreprene­urship Movement, which assists township entreprene­urs, said sensible health interventi­ons were required to protect people from the dangers of tobacco. But the ban on the display of tobacco products would destroy township and informal businesses.

“The point of sale regulation­s must be removed entirely and the ban on confection­ery and toys that resemble tobacco products must also be removed,” said eKasi founding executive director Elvis Sekhaolelo.

Cigarette sales provided a vital revenue stream for small township businesses, he said. “Tobacco products are a cashcow and enable people to move into other businesses.”

 ??  ?? Aaron Motsoaledi
Aaron Motsoaledi

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