A comprehensive law to regulate the manufacturing, advertising distribution and consumption of tobacco products in Nigeria. It is aimed at domesticating the WHO's Framework Convention on Tobacco Control (FCTC)
Search This Blog
Monday, October 11, 2010
Friday, October 8, 2010
Pass Tobacco Control Bill, NGO Urges NASS
A non-government organisation, NGO, based in Ogba, Lagos State, Environmental Rights Action, has called on the National Assembly to pass the National Tobacco Control Bill into law without further delay.
Addressing a press conference to mark the 10th International Week of Resistance Against Tobacco in Lagos on Monday, the NGO’s director of corporate accountability compaigns, Mr. Akinbode Oluwafemi accused a particular tobacco firm which controls about 80 per cent of the market of continued threat and misleading the yoouth into consumption of tobacco.
Akinbode claiemd that the tobacco company arranged secret smoking parties in different parts of Nigeria especially in Ajegunle and Victoria Island in Lagos State. He said the company was planning more tobacco smoking parties during the Yuletide from November this year.
Akinbode said the tobacco companies have been lobbying political office holders with partnership on public health issues, pretending to help farmers, retailers in order to frustrate the passage of the law on tobacco control.
“It is important that while youth smoking continues to be on the increase, tobacco companies continues to addict our youth they organise all over the country yet the tobacco control bill is presently lying idle before the NASS,” Akinbode regretted. He urged members of the NASS to be wary of the tobacco companies before they kill more of our youth through uncontrolled consumption of tobacco.
Youth Cautioned On Tobacco Addiction
-Zacheaus Somorin
Youths around the country have been warned to desist from smoking as the world marks the International Week of Resistance. At a press briefing held in Lagos, the Director, Cooperate Accountability Campaign and Administration, Environmental Rights Action (ERA), Mr. Akinbode Oluwafemi, stated that this year's event is aimed building momentum in the run-up to the WHO Framework Convention on Tobacco Control (FCTC) meetings in Uruguay in November.
The meetings are planned for a unified, international action to prevent the tobacco industry from derailing the FCTC's lifesaving measures.
He stated that "FCTC entered into force in 2005 and has since been ratified by more than 170 countries, representing close to 90 per cent of the world's population" saying that the "treaty aims to reverse an epidemic that today claims the life of one in 10 adults".
He explained further that "the single greatest obstacle to the treaty's success is tobacco industries' interference in public health policy - a practice that Article 5.3 of the treaty effectively forbids".
"Smoking especially among youths in Nigeria over the last few years has continued to rise. A survey conducted in 2001 shows that 9.1 per cent of Nigerian youths smoke cigarette. The figure by another survey conducted in 2008 has jumped to between 17 per cent and 27 per cent.Akinbode stated that the report on Global Tobacco Treaty Action Guide is intended to keep governments alert and make them anticipate and thwart attempts by the vested commercial interests of the tobacco industry to undermine the implementation of tobacco control policies. He said further that the report reinforces the need for governments to insulate their public health policies from interference by tobacco companies.
"In fact, a recent survey in four local governments of Adamawa state put smoking rate among the youth at 33.9 per cent. While smoking rate has been on the increase the Senate has been foot-dragging in passing the National Tobacco Control Bill," he posited, calling on the National Assembly to pass the National Tobacco Control Bill.
SOURCE
Thursday, October 7, 2010
Implementation of tobacco treaty will save 200m people –Report
No fewer than 200 million people in the world will be saved by the year 2050 if the tobacco treaty is implemented, a report by the Environmental Rights Action, Friends of the Earth, Nigeria (ERA/FoEN) and Corporate Accountability International has said.
The report also alleged tobacco companies interference in the implementation of the global tobacco treaty formally known as the World Health Organization Framework Convention on Tobacco Control.
“Tobacco companies interference remains the single greatest obstacle to this objective and a centerpiece of discussion at the November meeting,” the report said.
Director of Corporate Accountability International, Gigi Kellet, said tobacco companies initially tried to bully the global community out of advancing the treaty and that it is now attempting to bully countries out of enforcing it.
According to the report, each year, tobacco kills more than five million people and that 80 per cent of the victims are in underdeveloped countries.
Subscribe to:
Posts (Atom)