Daily Sabah (Turkey)

Big tobacco cries foul after hard-line treaty

-

BIG tobacco companies moved yesterday to counter the hard line taken by a global tobacco control treaty, including its decision that new “vaping” products should face the same restrictio­ns as cigarettes. A meeting of state parties to the UN health agency’s Framework Convention on Tobacco Control (FCTC) concluded last week with a number of anti-industry rulings, including increased efforts to curb industry influence and a call to crack down on new products. Philip Morris Internatio­nal (PMI) and Japan Tobacco Internatio­nal (JTI) responded by releasing surveys suggesting the public would prefer a more industry-friendly approach. Yesterday, PMI published a poll it commission­ed from Ipsos about attitudes to new so-called “harm-reduction” products such as e-cigarettes and heated tobacco sticks.

The survey of 31,000 people across 31 countries, conducted in September, showed that “77 percent of adults agree that government­s should do all they can to encourage men and women who would otherwise keep smoking cigarettes to completely switch to better alternativ­es,” PMI said in a statement.

PMI and other companies say such products are far less dangerous than traditiona­l cigarettes, and insist they can help smokers unable to quit completely switch to “safer” alternativ­es. Anti-tobacco activists are meanwhile quick to point out that the companies’ claims that their new products are safer are based only on industry-backed scientific studies.

“On multiple occasions, they have duped government­s about the relative safety of their new products,” Matthew Myers, head of Tobacco Free Kids, told AFP last week, pointing to past industry claims when filtered cigarettes and lowtar cigarettes first emerged.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from Türkiye