Saturday Star

SPARKS FLY AT 100% BAN ON SMOKING PLAN

- SHAIN GERMANER

ONE HUNDRED percent smokefree public spaces. The removal of smoking areas in restaurant­s and clubs. Totally uniform packaging for all cigarette and vape brands, adorned with warnings and pictures of diseased organs.

The removal of all smoking advertisem­ents, including for e-cigarettes and vapes.

These are the key propositio­ns by Health Minister Aaron Motsoaledi as his department fights to amend the Tobacco Products Control Amendment Act in a bid to lower smoking rates countrywid­e.

The plans to change legislatio­n around smoking and vaping have been in the pipeline for months, but this week the Department of Health revealed it would be submitting its plans to the cabinet early next year.

Savera Kalidan, executive director of the National Council Against Smoking, has been in consultati­on with the department in recent weeks, ironing out the legislatio­n. For her and her organisati­on, it can’t be enforced soon enough.

According to Kalidan, the concept of “plain-packaging” has been implemente­d in five or six countries so far, and in Australia, it’s been proven to lower the number of smokers countrywid­e, as well as prevent non-smokers from picking up the habit.

If the amendments are made, all cigarette boxes will be beige, or brown, use one font to determine the brand, and have pictures of diseased organs suffering from the effects of smoking.

“Or even the image of a man in the throws of erectile dysfunctio­n,” said Kalidan.

It would likely apply to non-combustibl­e cigarettes, like vapes, which would also be affected by the new legislatio­n.

The same advertisin­g restrictio­ns on cigarettes would apply to vapes and e-cigs, they would no longer be sold to those under the age of 18, and they would not be usable in public spaces.

The Health Department has also called for 100% smoke-free public spaces, meaning the removal of smoking areas, and insists that smokers be at least 10m from an entrance or exit.

It’s a significan­t change, but Kalidan said it’s fundamenta­l to both the health and economy of South Africa.

“Each year, 34 000 South Africans die from complicati­ons related to smoking. For every R1 (health authoritie­s) earn from tax, they are spending R2 to address smoking health and smoking-related issues,” she said.

The legislatio­n, she said, would bring down consumptio­n significan­tly, and in a developing country, a smoking rate of 1 in 5 is unacceptab­le.

The department agrees, and national spokespers­on Popo Maja said yesterday the plan was to reduce lung cancer and other smoking-related diseases.

After the legislatio­n has been presented to Parliament, opportunit­ies for public commentary on the amendments will be opened, and one organisati­on likely to fight against it is the Free Market Foundation.

Director Leon Louw has spent years fighting against tobacco legislatio­n, claiming it is an attack on the personal freedom of citizens, an affront to the dignity of smokers, and an infringeme­nt of consumer rights.

Yesterday he described the attempts to demonise smoking and smokers infringed on the right to human dignity and the right to bodily integrity.

“I have the right to treat my body in an unhealthy way. It is my choice. There are many other bigger killers in the country. Obesity, Aids, alcohol. But you don’t see legislatio­n forcing people to eat better, use condoms or prohibit fast foods.

“Why not enforce compulsory exercise, condoms, eating healthily? Because that infringes on personal freedom.”

The government had every right to encourage people to live healthier, but this was not persuasion, but rather coercion, he said.

Regarding the plain-packaging approach and ban on advertisin­g, Louw said this infringed on a consumer’s right to informatio­n.

Attempts to contact British American Tobacco (BAT) about the proposed legislatio­n yesterday were unsuccessf­ul.

However, in March, when plain-packaging legislatio­n was suggested to the company, it threatened to shut down operations in South Africa.

At the time, Joe Heshu, BAT’s head of external affairs in Southern Africa, told Business Report the new rules threatened the South African branch’s financial viability.

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