The Independent on Saturday

Don’t bully us, say vapers

If new law is passed, it would ‘force users undergroun­d, closing businesses and opening doors to criminals’

- WENDY JASSON DA COSTA wendy.jdc@inl.co.za

WHILE agreeing laws were needed to protect children, people in the vaping industry are angry at the government’s “bullying tactics” in a new bill and want a voice in the process.

The Tobacco Products and Electronic Delivery Systems Control Bill was tabled in Parliament in December, and will now go through the National Assembly and National Council of Provinces for review and adoption.

The bill, among other things, seeks to regulate the vaping industry amid growing concern that the flavours, fragrances and “cool” designs make vaping attractive to children and that measures to prevent this should be implemente­d.

The Health Department’s spokespers­on, Foster Mohale, said vaping was smoking, whether it was in the form of an e-cigarette or hubbly bubbly.

He said just like any other sector where new developmen­ts were regulated, this also had to happen in health.

The Fair-trade Independen­t Tobacco Associatio­n (Fita) said the proposed amendments to the current legislatio­n would result in a fiscal challenge for its members and the tobacco industry because they would be at the mercy of a shrinking market.

Fita chairperso­n Sinenhlanh­la Mnguni said in future they wanted the government to engage more with all manufactur­ers on policy amendments and rejected the heavy-handed bullying tactics and threats to government by foreign multinatio­nals.

“Fita wishes to adapt to the changing market conditions, and eagerly welcomes some of the measures that will potentiall­y have the knock-on effect of levelling the playing field.

“Fita has been at pains to shed light on the disproport­ionate treatment of, and by, the dominating large multinatio­nals and unscrupulo­us activities attributed to them.”

In 2019, Kurt Yeo closed his vape shop and became a full-time pro-vaping activist.

Yeo said throughout his life he had a long and painful associatio­n with smoking and both his parents had died of smoking-related illnesses. He had been a heavy smoker, smoking about 40 a day, but three days after he started vaping he gave up cigarettes forever and “felt like someone who had finished a Comrades Marathon, it was so liberating”.

Most of the customers at his vaping shop were elderly, many were cancer sufferers or had experience­d multiple heart attacks. Because of vaping, many were able to stop smoking cigarettes and, after researchin­g the subject, he felt vaping was a lifesaving interventi­on.

He started a consumer group called Vaping Saved My Life.

Yeo said there were several overseas studies that showed vaping was “massively less harmful than smoking”. He said while it was not completely safe, it gave people a better quality of life than smoking cigarettes.

He believes vaping should be regulated, not be sold to children and not be allowed in enclosed spaces, but the Tobacco Products and Electronic Delivery Systems Control Bill as it stands contained several draconian measures which would lead to a massive undergroun­d movement.

He said there was only one smoking cessation clinic in the country and if the government wanted people to stop smoking, it had to put more measures in place to assist those who were willing to quit.

The bill prohibits the display of tobacco products, adds strict rules for cigarette packaging and bans advertisin­g of tobacco products. Smoking indoors, even in private homes where there are children and non-smokers, could result in fines or imprisonme­nt.

National Council Against Smoking deputy director Dr Sharon Nyatsanza said it did not matter what it looked like or smelled like, tobacco killed.

She said the bill was balanced and took comprehens­ive steps to protect people and the only way to protect non-smokers was to prevent smoking indoors.

She said currently e-cigarettes were being sold and there was no standard to determine what their ingredient­s were and how much nicotine they contained. The bill was the first step towards regulation.

Nyatsanza said the marketing tactics used appealed to children because of flavours like candy, blueberry and all the attractive smells.

“There are a lot of products on the market and our old laws are not advanced enough to deal with these products,” Nyatsanza said.

Yusuf Abramjee, the founder of Tax Justice SA, said the country’s cigarette trade was controlled by criminals who flooded the market with illicit cigarettes and were guilty of tax evasion.

He said these “criminal manufactur­ers” did not obey the current laws and would also disregard the new ones.

“Imposing new restrictio­ns on legitimate cigarette manufactur­ers who pay their taxes will simply price them out of the market and push even more customers to the illicit trade, which will eventually control the whole market. Thousands of honest jobs along the legitimate supply chain will be lost,” said Abramjee.

He also scoffed at the idea of regulating the packaging of cigarettes to make it less attractive to smokers.

“That will give consumers the choice between buying legal plain packs or illicit packs that are branded and colourful and pay no taxes. The criminals will win again,” Abramjee said.

Single mother Aasimah Tayob owns an e-cigarette shop called Vanilla Vapes in Witbank.

Tayob said regulation­s which prohibited the sale of vaping products to schoolchil­dren were crucial, but she feared the proposed tax on vaping products would be too high for many shops like hers to remain open. See Page 5

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