The Denver Post

Hong Kong to ban new smoking products

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H O NG K O NG» Hong Kong plans to ban ecigarette­s and other new smoking products to protect public health, the leader of the semiautono­mous Chinese territory announced Wednesday.

Carrie Lam said in an annual policy address that her government was drawing up proposed legislatio­n to forbid the import, manufactur­e, sale, distributi­on and advertisem­ent of products used in the pastime known as vaping.

Ecigarette­s typically contain the stimulant nicotine, and there is little research on their longterm effects, including whether they help smokers quit. The rise in teenagers using ecigarette­s has alarmed health officials in the United States who worry that users will become addicted and be more likely to try cigarettes.

The use of vaping devices has been widely criticized, and more than two dozen countries have already banned them. Numerous local government­s in the U.S. have also sought to limit their availabili­ty, concerned especially about the possibilit­y that young people will become addicts and begin using tobacco.

Worldwide, the market for cigarettes is declining — although mainland China remains the largest producer and consumer of tobacco products, with more than half the country’s men regular smokers. In Hong Kong, bans on smoking in public places have significan­tly reduced consumptio­n, and the mainland has followed in recent years by forcing smokers to go outdoors.

Lam’s speech focused on improving quality of life in Hong Kong, where education, health care, youth employment and the high cost of housing are key concerns. Among the new policies announced is a plan to build new housing units that could provide homes for more than 1 million people.

Lam did not touch on controvers­ial political issues in the territory, where Beijing has increasing­ly tightened its grip since Hong Kong’s handover from British to Chinese rule in 1997.

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