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PH delays graphic warnings on cigarette packs despite law

Agence France-Presse

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PH delays graphic warnings on cigarette packs despite law
The tobacco industry is able to convince government that it should be allowed to use up its stocks that don't bear graphic health warnings – until May 2016

MANILA, Philippines – Graphic warnings on Philippine cigarette packets will not appear for almost two years more despite the law technically coming into force on Thursday, August 7.

Health officials blamed pressure from a powerful tobacco lobby.

“We wanted only a 6-month [transition] period, but that is what the legislators said. There is nothing we can do,” the leader of the department’s tobacco control office, Marilisa Calvadores, told Agence France-Presse.

President Benigno Aquino III signed the bill into law in July after political wrangling by a government that discourages smoking even as it encourages a politically powerful tobacco-growing industry.

The warnings will not appear on cigarette packs until about May 2016, Calvadores said. (SEE: What a scary cigarette pack will look like in the PH)

“The rationale was to give cigarette manufacturers a chance to use up the supplies that are already in the market,” she added.

 Emer Rojas, head of the New Vois Association, an anti-smoking group, said a powerful bloc of legislators from tobacco-growing regions had successfully watered down the law.

“This (law) was a compromise, but it is far better than nothing. It is in the right direction but there are features we don’t like,” he told Agence France-Presse.

The law mandates that the graphic warnings, showing the harmful effects of smoking, should cover the bottom half of the cigarette pack.

Rojas described the provision giving cigarette companies 20 months to put out the warnings and exhaust their stocks of unmarked packs as “delaying tactics.”

Officials of the country’s tobacco industry association could not be contacted for comment.

Just over 28% of all adults in the Philippines smoke, and an average of 240 Filipinos die every day from smoking related diseases, according to the WHO.

In 2013 Aquino, who has been chided for his inability to quit smoking, signed a “sin tax” law dramatically raising the taxes on tobacco products. – Rappler.com

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