A bill that would toughen anti-smoking legislation in South Africa
has been submitted to parliament for review by lawmakers, a health
ministry spokesman said on Wednesday, as a campaign against the proposed
changes intensifies.
The Control of Tobacco Products and Electronic Delivery Systems Bill
is expected to restrict smoking in public places, introduce plain
packaging, ban point-of-sale advertising and displays, and scrap the
sale of single cigarettes.
Health ministry spokesman Popo Maja told Reuters the bill, submitted
to parliament for review last week, seeks to comply with standards set
by the World Health Organization’s (WHO) tobacco control framework,
which South Africa signed in 2005.
“Everything has been taken into consideration. What WHO and our
country are saying is that it is important for us to make sure that we
have a healthy workforce,” he said.
Smoking rates are high in South Africa, where estimates link tobacco to more than 40,000 deaths a year.
As with previous changes to tobacco legislation in South Africa and
around the world the bill is facing a backlash from businesses who may
suffer from tougher anti-smoking rules.
“What if your loved one got put in jail because they smoke? It is
just one step of the bill controlling your lifestyle choices. Join us in
saying #HandOffMyChoices,” the radio advert broadcast by 702 Talk Radio
and funded by JTI says.
The radio station confirmed to Reuters News that Japan Tobacco International had paid for the advert.
The Tobacco Alcohol and Gambling Advisory Advocacy and Action Group
(TAG), which campaigns for tobacco control, has said it will make a
complaint to regulators about the radio advert, which it believes
breaches laws on tobacco advertising. Another pressure group, the
National Council against Smoking, has also criticised the advert.
A group of business associations representing nearly 20,000
restaurants, taverns and small business traders and consumers have also
said they oppose the bill, saying “over regulation” will affect jobs and
the economy.
They also say it will criminalise small businesses that sell tobacco products and that the proposed fines are excessive.
“Steering emotions, encouraging people
to complain, renting crowds to demonstrate are well known tactics by
the tobacco industry,” health ministry spokesman Maja said.
“When people
get sick, the tobacco industry is not there to foot the bill. It is
public health that does because these people end up in public
institutions.”
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