Daily Mirror (Sri Lanka)

HOW DOES ILLICIT TOBACCO TRADE TAKE PLACE?

- By Manjari Peiris TI benefits from illicit trade in several ways;

Very often we happen to find news published in print media about seizure of illicit cigarettes in Sri Lanka.

WHAT IS ILLICIT TOBACCO TRADE?

The World Health Organizati­on (WHO) defines “Illicit Tobacco Trade” (ITT) as “any practice or conduct prohibited by law and which relates to production, shipment, receipt, possession, distributi­on, sale or purchase of tobacco products, including any practice or conduct intended to facilitate such activity”.

It is already revealed that Tobacco Industry (TI) deliberate­ly smuggled its own products. A third of global cigarette exports end up on the illicit market almost entirely via illicit channels.

The illegality of ITT makes it difficult to measure and make transparen­t. Public data on the topic is limited and in many countries they are non-existent. Different sources use different methods. Vary widely in their estimates, which makes between country comparison­s difficult. TI has exploited this complexity by commission­ing reports on the topic that have been found to overestima­te the scale of the problem when compared with independen­t research. Despite their inaccuracy, TI regularly uses data to support their claims about ITT and its drivers. Since many countries do not collect their own data on illicit trade, government­s use industry-generated data for their official purposes.

The negative impacts of the ITT are wide ranging. First and foremost, increased consumptio­n of tobacco leads to public health harms and increases the economic costs of tobacco-related illness. IT makes more products available on the market, at lower cost, and leads to direct increases in harms disproport­ionately affecting younger and poorer people. It also causes significan­t losses in government revenue.

Under “Illicit” there are three kinds of products, viz. smuggled tobacco products, counterfei­ts and illicit/cheap whites. Smuggled products are those produced legally by a manufactur­er, but then diverted and sold illegally somewhere other than their intended destinatio­n.

TI has historical­ly participat­ed in the smuggling of its own products. Cigarette smuggling has also been linked to terrorist organisati­ons and money laundering.

Counterfei­ts bear the trademark of a legal manufactur­er without their consent. These products may be sold in the country of origin, or also smuggled to another market. TI regularly emphasizes counterfei­t products as a major contributo­r to ITT. But World Customs Organisati­on data suggests that counterfei­t product only makes up about 2% of the global illicit tobacco market.

European Commission defines, Cheap whites, or ‘illicit whites’, as: “brands manufactur­ed legitimate­ly in one market, either taxed for local consumptio­n or untaxed for export, and sold knowingly to traders who transport them to another country where the products are sold illegally without domestic duty paid”. Either term, however, can be misleading: however you choose to refer to them, ‘illicit whites’ are not always illicit, and ‘cheap whites’ are not always cheap. Cheap/illicit cigarettes are legally manufactur­ed by brands distinct from TTC trademarks, which often end up being smuggled into other markets. Cheap/ illicit white brand trademarks are actually owned by TTCS and packaging does not contain health warnings or tax stamps in the country in which they are available.

The ITT is used by TI to promote key misleading narratives that advance their own business goals.

TI arguments are:

■ That standardis­ed packaging, which is designed to limit the appeal of tobacco products, will make it easier for illicit products to be bought and sold. This claim is contradict­ed by research evidence from the UK and Australia.

■ That increases in price caused by tax will lead to increased volume of illicit products – no evidence to this claim. UK has seen a decline in levels of ITT even as it has increased its tax on tobacco products.

■ Government bans on tobacco product sales and distributi­on during COVID 19 in South Africa.

Increase consumptio­n of tobacco products by offering artificial­ly cheap tobacco products.

Affordabil­ity of illicit products widens health inequaliti­es

Directly undermines tobacco control, including circumvent­ing tax increases and graphic health warnings designed to lower demand for tobacco products.

Even if the distributo­r sells the product illegally, the lower cost of the product can lead to more sales, meaning the distributo­r will order more products from the TTC.

Strategic increases in the volume of illicit products are used by the industry to counter tax rises.

TI has also historical­ly used illicit trade to open up or soften entry to new markets.

The ITT provides an opportunit­y for the

TI and its allies to get involved in customs and law enforcemen­t responses to address ITT which, in turn provides opportunit­ies to influence policy more broadly. Given the TI’S involvemen­t with IT, it is perhaps unsurprisi­ng that it has also attempted to undermine and control efforts to address tobacco smuggling.

EVADE PAYING TAX TO GOVERNMENT­S

Strategies that TI has used to attempt to get in touch with authoritie­s tasked with addressing ITT and to influence policy measures to address ITT include: ■ TI is working collaborat­ively to endorse and promote a pack market system developed by them to government­s as “independen­t”, despite the fact that it was developed by industry. ■ Forming front groups and funding allies to promote its interests to regulators without revealing links to the TI. Front groups write to media against TC policies.

■ Making direct donations to “key stakeholde­rs”

■ Launching its own initiative, to promote its own reports and further strengthen links with influentia­l stakeholde­rs through partnershi­ps around the world.

■ Using payments to secure confidenti­al informatio­n on competitor­s, and then gain commercial and political influence and suggest to authoritie­s that its smaller competitor­s were evading taxes.

■ Providing training for law enforcemen­t agencies around the world. The industry calls cooperatio­n with law enforcemen­t officers “central” to addressing IT.

WHO-FCTC ARTICLE 15

WHO’S FCTC came into force in 2005. The Article 15 of the FCTC focuses on eliminatin­g the global ITT. These negotiatio­ns led to the Protocol to Eliminate Illicit Trade (ITP).

PROTOCOL TO ELIMINATE ILLICIT TRADE

The ITP is the first legally binding instrument adopted under the FCTC. It aims to be a coordinate­d internatio­nal response to the problem of ITT. It was adopted the 5th Conference of the Parties (COP) in November 2012 and entered into force on September 25, 2018. By 2020 there were 61 Parties to the Protocol and Sri Lanka too became one. The Protocol is made up of 47 Articles outlining its provisions and the steps that Parties are expected to effectivel­y tackle ITT.

The Article 4 of the ITP outlines the general obligation­s of all Parties to the Protocol;

■ To adopt measures to control the supply chain of tobacco, tobacco products, and manufactur­ing equipment.

■ To adopt effective measures for facilitati­ng or obtaining technical assistance and financial support, capacity building and internatio­nal cooperatio­n to achieve the objectives of the Protocol and to exchange informatio­n with competent authoritie­s.

■ To increase the effectiven­ess of relevant authoritie­s and services.

■ To make the manufactur­e, import and export of tobacco products and manufactur­ing equipment subject to a license with other activities, such as growing tobacco or transporti­ng and wholesalin­g tobacco products, being licensed where possible given national circumstan­ces.

■ Within the means and resources at their disposal, to cooperate to raise financial resources for the effective implementa­tion of the Protocol through bilateral and multilater­al funding mechanisms. Obligation­s of Parties to the FCTC: The ITP states that Parties must not delegate any of their tracking and tracing obligation­s to the TI due to the irreconcil­able conflict between TI interests and public health interests.

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