This article is from the source 'guardian' and was first published or seen on . It last changed over 40 days ago and won't be checked again for changes.
You can find the current article at its original source at http://www.theguardian.com/world/2013/dec/11/china-considers-nationwide-ban-smoking-public
The article has changed 2 times. There is an RSS feed of changes available.
Previous version
1
Next version
Version 0 | Version 1 |
---|---|
China considers nationwide ban on smoking in public | China considers nationwide ban on smoking in public |
(35 minutes later) | |
China's leaders are considering a nationwide smoking ban in public, a leading health official said on Wednesday, as the country's tobacco-related health and economic costs continue to mount. | China's leaders are considering a nationwide smoking ban in public, a leading health official said on Wednesday, as the country's tobacco-related health and economic costs continue to mount. |
Yang Jie, deputy director of the Chinese Centre for Disease Control and Prevention's Office of Tobacco Control, said China's cabinet was mulling over a regulation that would ban smoking in public places nationwide. "Optimistically," he said, it could be implemented within a year. | |
"If you look at the general development of legislation, I don't think there are a lot of problems," he said at a briefing about the health costs of tobacco use in China. "What is most troubling is how to enforce the law effectively." | "If you look at the general development of legislation, I don't think there are a lot of problems," he said at a briefing about the health costs of tobacco use in China. "What is most troubling is how to enforce the law effectively." |
China is home to more than 300 million smokers – a third of the global total – and produces nearly half of the world's cigarettes, according to official statistics. | China is home to more than 300 million smokers – a third of the global total – and produces nearly half of the world's cigarettes, according to official statistics. |
Smoking-related diseases cause more than a million deaths in the country a year, and experts expect the number to nearly triple by 2030. Smoking is deeply ingrained in the country's business culture; cigarettes are doled out as a token of respect and given as gifts on formal occasions, especially outside of major cities, where there is no social stigma against smoking anywhere, at any time. | |
Efforts at tobacco control in the country have been largely ineffective. One of the biggest barriers to progress is political. The Chinese government owns the country's tobacco industry, and 7-10% of its annual revenue – about 600bn yuan (£60.3bn) in 2011 – comes from tobacco sales. China's premier, Li Keqiang, oversees the country's public health policy; his younger brother, Li Keming, runs the country's state-owned tobacco monopoly. | Efforts at tobacco control in the country have been largely ineffective. One of the biggest barriers to progress is political. The Chinese government owns the country's tobacco industry, and 7-10% of its annual revenue – about 600bn yuan (£60.3bn) in 2011 – comes from tobacco sales. China's premier, Li Keqiang, oversees the country's public health policy; his younger brother, Li Keming, runs the country's state-owned tobacco monopoly. |
"The most important thing is to take tobacco control away from the tobacco industry," Judith Mackay, a senior advisor to the World Lung Foundation, said at the briefing. "That's a really important structural change that will have to happen before, quite honestly, anything happens in China." | "The most important thing is to take tobacco control away from the tobacco industry," Judith Mackay, a senior advisor to the World Lung Foundation, said at the briefing. "That's a really important structural change that will have to happen before, quite honestly, anything happens in China." |
Since China signed the World Health Organisation framework convention on tobacco control in 2003 – a treaty designed "to protect present and future generations from the devastating … consequences of tobacco consumption" – the country's tobacco production has risen dramatically, from 1.75tn cigarettes a year a decade ago to about 2.58tn in 2012. China's health ministry has banned smoking in a variety of public places, but lacks the power to enforce its laws. | |
"China's years of anti-smoking efforts have had almost no results," China's official newswire Xinhua said last Wednesday, after the figures were released. | "China's years of anti-smoking efforts have had almost no results," China's official newswire Xinhua said last Wednesday, after the figures were released. |
Yet Mackay said the government's attitude towards tobacco control was changing. China's Central Party School has completed a 200-page research paper suggesting that the country adopt a tougher stance on smoking, she said. | |
The president, Xi Jinping, led the research institution until January, and Mackay said the study was conducted under his watch. | |
In an interview, Mackay recalled a conversation last year with one of the study's nine co-authors, Zhang Zhongjun. | |
"He said that there are a million jobs lost per year because a million people die from tobacco," she said. | "He said that there are a million jobs lost per year because a million people die from tobacco," she said. |
"That's the first time in China that I've seen this economic understanding, that the economic balance is definitely in favour of health." | "That's the first time in China that I've seen this economic understanding, that the economic balance is definitely in favour of health." |
Our editors' picks for the day's top news and commentary delivered to your inbox each morning. | Our editors' picks for the day's top news and commentary delivered to your inbox each morning. |
Previous version
1
Next version