The Guardian (Nigeria)

Tobacco kills over eight million persons yearly, WHO affirms

- From Emmanuel Samaila, Yola

WHealth Organisati­on ( WHO) has said over eight million people die yearly due to tobacco consumptio­n.

In a statement issued yesterday by the Regional Director, Dr. Matshidiso Moeti, to mark the 2023 World No Tobacco Day, the global agency said the epidemic is one of the biggest public health challenges the world has ever witnessed.

She observed that while the number of people using tobacco products is decreas- ing in other parts of the world, it is, however, rising in Africa.

Moeti said the number of tobacco users in WHO African Region increased from an estimated 64 mil - lion adults in 2000 to 73 million in 2018.

The increase, according to her, followed improved pro - duction and aggressive marketing by the industry. She urged that the occasion should be used by stakeholde­rs to renew advocacy for effective policies to check the problem and impact on individual­s, societies and nations.

Her words: “This year’s theme is: “Grow Food, Not Tobacco.” This theme aims to raise awareness about alternativ­e crop production and marketing opportunit­ies for tobacco farmers and encourage them to grow sustainabl­e and nutritious crops.

“The theme also seeks to expose the industr y’s efforts to interfere with attempts to substitute tobacco growing with sustainabl­e crops, thereby worsening the global food crisis. It calls on all of us t o ex p lore how food and agricultur­al policies make adequate nutritious food and healthy diets available, while reducing tobacco production.”

The statement added that tobacco farming destroys the ecosystem, depletes fertile soils, contaminat­es water bodies and pollutes the environmen­t.

“Any profit to be gained from tobacco as a cash crop may not offset the damage done to sustainabl­e food production in low and middleinco­me countries.”

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