Kuwait Times

Big tobacco beats foes in smoke-friendly SE Asia

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MANILA: A global treaty to fight the health impact of tobacco has suffered substantia­l setbacks in Southeast Asia, home to some of the world’s highest concentrat­ions of smokers, a watchdog group said yesterday. The powerful tobacco lobby last year stopped proposed cigarette tax increases in Malaysia and Indonesia, while Vietnam waived all duties on dried tobacco imports from Cambodia, the Southeast Asia Tobacco Control Alliance said in a report.

“We have found that the tobacco industry does not take a holiday from underminin­g or thwarting or delaying government efforts to control tobacco use,” Mary Assunta Kolandai, senior policy adviser for the alliance, told a news conference. The annual report, released at a tobacco conference at the Western Pacific office of the World Health Organizati­on (WHO) in Manila, monitors the region’s compliance with the 2003 WHO framework convention on tobacco control.

WHO says tobacco use causes lung cancer and heart disease, among other ailments, and kills more than seven million people each year. Indonesia, where 76.2 percent of males aged 15 or older smoke, Vietnam (47.7 percent), and the Philippine­s (43 percent) have some of the world’s highest concentrat­ions of tobacco users, it said. Tobacco use among adult males is also heavy in Cambodia (44.1 percent), Laos (56.6 percent), Malaysia (43 percent) and Thailand (41.4 percent), it said.

While tobacco taxes were the “most costeffect­ive way to reduce tobacco use”, WHO coordinato­r for tobacco and economics Jeremias Paul said only a few mostly European countries have imposed the ideal rate-equivalent to 75 percent of the retail price. “One of the reasons why it’s underutili­zed or not being implemente­d globally is what I term as the scare tactic of the tobacco industry,” he told reporters. This includes the argument that higher cigarette taxes would encourage smuggling and lawsuits while reducing state revenues and employment, Paul said. The alliance report also said new rules for “plain packaging” in Malaysia and pictorial health warnings for cigarette packs in Myanmar, Laos, and Cambodia, were either stopped or delayed last year. — AFP

 ??  ?? HANOI: A man uses a bamboo pipe to smoke tobacco at a local coffee shop. — AFP
HANOI: A man uses a bamboo pipe to smoke tobacco at a local coffee shop. — AFP

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