Daily Sabah (Turkey)

Nation to fight against tobacco use with new amendments

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line with the country’s efforts to tighten tobacco promotion, a parliament­ary committee approved amendments to impose a ban on the use and promotion of tobacco products in films and music videos as well as on TV, social media and other internet venues.

A PARLIAMENT­ARY committee approved amendments to health laws that provides major momentum for Turkey’s fight for tobacco control.

Amendments, one of the most comprehens­ive regulation­s after a landmark smoking ban in 2009, impose a ban on use or promotion of tobacco products on TV, TV series, films, music videos, films screened in cinemas and theater plays as well as on social media and other internet venues. The sale of tobacco products in facilities where health and education services are offered, such as universiti­es, will also be banned.

Another revolution­ary amendment is plain packaging. Instead of colorful packs deemed to encourage smoking by critics, cigarettes will come in packs with antismokin­g messages and messages indicating what smoking does to human health will cover 85 percent of the pack. All packs will be of standard size and will not have the logo of the company or type of cigarettes. Only a small space will be allocated on packs for placement of the brand. Violating the rules will be punishable with fines.

Smoking has been one of the habits most associated with Turks for decades and even created the expression: “To smoke like a Turk.” In 2009, Turkey banned smoking in all indoor spaces, including restaurant­s, bars, cafes and similar establishm­ents, and one year later the ban was extended to smoking in various sites such as stadiums, mosque courtyards and hospitals. Thenprime minister and incumbent President Recep Tayyip Erdoğan, a staunch teetotaler, is largely credited for the effective implementa­tion of the ban that significan­tly limited space for smokers. Apart from the ban, the country imposed higher taxes on cigarettes and provided free medicine and treatment for smokers.

Figures indicate that after the smoking ban in restaurant­s, bars, cafes, stadiums, hospitals and similar establishm­ents, the prevalence of smokers decreased. Increased taxes on cigarettes and free medical treatment for smokers aided a decline in the habit. Still, authoritie­s are determined to stamp out smoking, which still prevails among the young and kills more than 100,000 people every year due to diseases linked to smoking. The smoking rate was 31.6 percent in 2016, the latest year with available data, a decline from 32.5 percent in 2014.

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