[To read this article in Hindi language , click here ]
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(published in many Hindi/ English media in India and abroad)
The Indian Ministry of Health and Family Welfare revealed before the Central Information Commission that tobacco industry is putting "pressure" to relax the tobacco control policies (source: The Hindu, 14 November 2008).
The tobacco industry interference has times and again weakened and
delayed the enforcement of the public health policies - for example,
the tobacco industry, Indian Hotel Association and other allied
agencies had filed more than 70 court cases against tobacco control
policies in Indian courts in September 2008, and due to aggressive
lobbying by such agencies, the Group of Ministers (GoM) formed earlier
to review the pictorial warnings on tobacco products, diluted the
pictorial warnings provision and postponed the implementation of
pictorial warnings on tobacco products at least six-times.
The industry interference in public health policies certainly needs
urgent attention to save lives otherwise it will continue to threaten
to reverse the great advancements made in forging public health
policies and implementing them.
Meantime tobacco continues to kill more than a million people in
India every year. Indian government delegation is among the
representatives of 160 countries who are currently meeting in Durban,
South Africa to negotiate guidelines for a provision (Article 5.3) in
the global tobacco treaty that will determine whether millions of
people get the health protections they are now guaranteed under the
treaty.
The negotiations center on the implementation of Article 5.3 of the
World Health Organisation Framework Convention on Tobacco Control
(FCTC), which protects the treaty and related public health policies
from tobacco industry interference.
This Article 5.3 of the global tobacco treaty, if defined broadly,
recognizes the tobacco industry's fundamental conflict with public
health.
It is also vital to understand that unless the tobacco industry
interference in public health policies is checked, the implementation
of other health interventions (smoke-free policies, pictorial warnings
on tobacco products, tobacco advertising, promotion and sponsorship
bans for example) will continue to be weakened, slowed and challenged.
"Industry interference is the number one obstacle to the
implementation and enforcement of the global tobacco treaty," said
Kathy Mulvey, international policy director of Corporate Accountability
International. "Article 5.3 is the lynchpin of the treaty, determining
whether or not countries will be able to reverse this preventable
epidemic without the tobacco industry standing in their way."
To prevent abuses reported in several countries, the Network for
Accountability of Tobacco Transnationals (NATT) and the Corporate
Accountability International (www.stopcorporateabuse.org) insist that
the following provisions of the draft Article 5.3 guidelines would help
prevent abuses:
- Prohibiting government partnership or collaboration with the tobacco industry.
- Protecting against conflicts of interest for those involved in setting and implementing tobacco control policies.
They are calling for the draft Article 5.3 guidelines to be strengthened, in order to:
- Avoid government interaction with the tobacco industry, and set
strict rules of engagement for any meetings determined to be necessary.
- Ensure transparency around government interaction with the
tobacco industry and around tobacco industry activities and operations.
- Emphasize the tobacco industry's fundamental conflict with public health.
Since negotiations on the global tobacco treaty began in 1999, the
tobacco industry has used its political and economic influence in an
attempt to undermine, delay and water down public health measures.
If the government representatives of the 160 countries draft strong
guidelines for Article 5.3 at the ongoing COP-3 meeting in Durban,
South Africa (17-22 November), it will not only go a long way in
stopping all forms of tobacco industry interference at all levels but
also increase the effectiveness of other tobacco control interventions
around the world.
--------------------------------------------- Pictorial warning to save lives campaign
Pictorial warning to save lives campaign is a communications and advocacy campaign launched on 7 November 2008 (National Cancer Awareness Day) in lead up to 30 November on which date pictorial warnings on tobacco products will become mandatory in India.
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