China Daily Global Weekly

Reining in the tobacco sector

Government­s must do more to curb lobbying activities by the cigarette industry

- By JUDITH MACKAY The author is director of the Asian Consultanc­y on Tobacco Control based in Hong Kong. The views do not necessaril­y reflect those of China Daily.

The new Global Tobacco Industry Interferen­ce Index 2020 shows aggressive tobacco industry lobbying in 2019 and exploitati­on of the COVID-19 pandemic in 2020.

The report was released by global tobacco industry watchdog Stopping Tobacco Organizati­ons and Products. It measures tobacco industry influence: The more influence the tobacco industry has, the less the government­s are able to reduce the 8 million deaths worldwide caused by tobacco each year. Moreover, reports have clarified that smoking increases suffering and risks of dying from COVID-19.

Asia figures at the top of all three categories in the report — the bestperfor­ming government in resisting the tobacco industry (Brunei), the worst (Japan), and the most improved (Pakistan).

There were over 100 million deaths from tobacco in the last century. It is time to hold the tobacco industry to account for harm, deaths and economic losses from tobacco. Yet this new research from 57 countries covering 80 percent of the world population reveals government­s are not doing enough to curb the industry’s influence.

The World Health Organizati­on Framework Convention on Tobacco Control has been ratified by all government­s in the Western Pacific and China, including Hong Kong and Macao. An article in the treaty specifical­ly states that government­s shall protect their public health policies from commercial and other vested interests of the tobacco industry, which applies to the civil service, elected legislator­s and the judiciary.

Across regions, the tobacco industry spends only a small fraction of profits on corporate social responsibi­lity — which brings immense exposure and credibilit­y.

Patterns revealed in the new report show how such initiative­s created access to officials and a false perception of tobacco companies as responsibl­e actors; how public officials were offered jobs in the tobacco industry and vice versa, creating potential conflicts of interest; and how tobacco companies exploited a lack of transparen­cy and coordinati­on across government agencies to gain access.

The index details dozens of specific instances in which government­s let their guard down and the tobacco industry took advantage, for example in Bangladesh, Indonesia and Japan.

Smokers who contract COVID-19 have almost three times the risk of dying. Yet the tobacco industry is exploiting the pandemic by stepping up efforts to lobby government­s through department­s of finance, customs and trade.

The tobacco industry has even found ways to aggressive­ly market different types of novel tobacco products, such as electronic cigarettes and heated tobacco products. They are addictive and harmful yet are being presented as a solution to the tobacco epidemic the industry itself created.

At the same time, the industry used donations to promote itself as a partner to government­s fighting the COVID-19 pandemic. Examples in Asia include British American Tobacco providing personal protective equipment to public hospitals. Government department­s wrote to various agencies asking them to cooperate with BAT and Japan Tobacco Internatio­nal during the COVID-19 shutdown.

In the Philippine­s, Philip Morris Fortune Tobacco Corp donated medical equipment. In Indonesia, the group’s local subsidiary, PT HM Sampoerna Tbk, used donations as opportunit­ies for marketing and media coverage, requesting policy changes such as seeking relaxation of restrictio­ns on outdoor tobacco advertisin­g.

The report offers solutions, recommendi­ng a menu of actions government­s can take to avoid conflicts of interest: adopting measures to protect public officials from industry influence and to avoid shadowy dialogues; preventing tobacco industry participat­ion in policy; avoiding unnecessar­y interactio­ns with the tobacco industry and ensuring transparen­cy of meetings that do occur; de-normalizin­g the industry’s so-called corporate social responsibi­lity activities and implementi­ng transparen­cy measures by making the industry disclose its marketing, lobbying and philanthro­pic activities; and, finally, stopping benefits and incentives for the tobacco industry.

More can and should be done by all government­s across the AsiaPacifi­c to counter the tobacco industry’s meddling.

Just as malaria will not be reduced until the vector — the mosquito — is eliminated, the tobacco epidemic will never be resolved until the tobacco industry is controlled.

The tobacco industry will not stop interferin­g. Civil society can expose and counter tobacco industry interferen­ce, but it is in the hands of government­s to halt it altogether.

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