The Citizen (Gauteng)

British American Tobacco gives state ultimatum

- Bernade e Wicks

British American Tobacco South Africa (BAT) is again threatenin­g legal action over the ban on cigarette and tobacco product sales during the lockdown.

The group has given government until 10am on Monday to lift the ban or risk being hauled to court.

This month, following Cooperativ­e Governance and Traditiona­l Affairs Minister Nkosazana Dlamini-Zuma’s announceme­nt that the ban would extend into Level 4 of the lockdown, BAT put government on similar terms.

But the group then backed down, saying it had instead decided to “pursue further discussion­s with government on the formulatio­n and applicatio­n of the regulation­s under the lockdown”.

Yesterday, however – and in the wake of the news that the ban would now be extended into Level 3 of the lockdown – BAT issued a statement saying it was starting urgent legal proceeding­s with the support of Japan Tobacco Internatio­nal “as well as groups and organisati­ons representi­ng the tobacco value chain across the country, including consumers, tobacco farmers and retailers”.

The group said it had made “every effort to constructi­vely engage with the government, including making detailed submission­s, along with other interested parties, to various ministers, as well as to the Presidency”.

“To date, no formal response has been received from the government, and BAT has also not been included in any of the government’s consultati­on processes so far,” the group said.

BAT spokespers­on Johnny Moloto said government had decided to maintain the ban in Level 3 of the lockdown “under the guise of limiting the spread of Covid-19, while allowing all other previously banned consumer products to go back on sale”.

“Given the situation and the lack of any response from the government despite our ongoing efforts to engage with them, we are now commencing urgent legal proceeding­s,” Moloto said.

“The government’s continued ban on legal tobacco sales is threatenin­g the survival of the tobacco sector and the livelihood­s it directly supports.

“It has only succeeded in significan­tly growing a massive and nationwide illegal industry at the direct expense of law-abiding businesses, citizens and taxpayers.”

Activist Bev Maclean, whose petition to overturn the ban has garnered more than 606 000 signatures , has voiced her support for BAT’s court action. Maclean said “the unintended consequenc­es of the ban are many”.

“Not only have smokers continued to buy cigarettes and smoke, albeit from the illegal market, but they now have to travel further to obtain them, and are being forced to share a cigarette, as the prices are so exorbitant,” she said.

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