By Nancy Handabile
IT is a fact that tobacco is extremely harmful to
health. However, this does not seem to deter many people from smoking.
The tobacco problem is a global challenge and
because we are living in a global village, trends in one country will most
likely spread to others.
Recently, the Australian government came up with a
law to enforce plain packaging on cigarette packets.
The law stipulates that all cigarette packets
regardless of the brand be packaged plainly but with images of the various
ailments, which tobacco causes.
These ailments range from mouth cancer, lung
diseases, and respiratory problems, among others.
This did not go down well with the tobacco
companies that argued that the value of their trademarks would be destroyed if
they were no longer able to display their distinctive colours, brand designs
and logos on packets of cigarettes.
They took the government to court but the
Australian High Court recently upheld the Government’s decision to introduce
plain packaging.
Thus, in December, packets will instead come in a
uniformly drab shade of olive and feature dire health warnings and graphic
photographs of smoking’s health effects.
The government, which has urged other countries to
adopt similar rules, hopes the new packs will make smoking as unglamorous as
possible.
Zambia has a law that stops smoking in public.
However, stricter measures are needed especially that many smokers start in
their teens.
Many countries are now facing the pressure of
following Australia’s route and Zambia is no exception.
Zambia Consumer Association (ZACA) executive
director, Muyunda Ililonga has encouraged the Zambian Government to follow suit.
According to Mr Ililonga, “the ruling in Australia
is a landmark victory for public health globally. It sends a strong message
that the industry can be defeated.”
The new law will now make it illegal, for example,
for the cigarette manufacturers to market cigarettes in ‘slim’ packages to
women to promote the belief that smoking is a way to stay thin and control
weight.
The tobacco companies have opposed plain packaging
more ferociously than any other tobacco control measure because they know that
plain packaging would have a major impact on smoking in Australia – and in
other countries that might follow Australia’s lead.
“The cigarette companies hate nothing more than
laws that restrict their ability to sell more cigarettes,” says Mr Ililonga, adding
that “their legal challenges are destined to fail because the courts accept
that more cigarette sales mean more sickness and more deaths, and that
governments have a duty to act to reduce these harms.”
Mr Ililonga advised that a Government determined to
protect its people would always succeed regardless of obstacles.
“We feel the Government must follow the pioneering
journey undertaken by the Australian government in standing up against tobacco.”
His sentiments that the attractive packaging is
one of the ways in which the tobacco industry advertise their deadly products
are echoed by Charlie Mumba (not his real name).
Times of Zambia
No comments:
Post a Comment