Today, the Federal Executive Council approved the draft National Tobacco Control Bill 2004 and will be sent to the
National Assembly as an Executive Bill for promulgation into law. The bill recommends a minimum of six months imprisonment or N50,000
or both for individuals that smoke in public places designated as
non-smoking areas.
According to the Minister
of Information, Laban Maku; and the Minister of Health, Onyebuchi
Chukwu, Chukwu said, penalties for corporate offenders varied from
N1million to N5million and one year to two years imprisonment for the
chief executives of such firms adding that all forms of advertisement of
tobacco is totally banned under the proposed law.
He also said that while the law forbids government from accepting
gifts from tobacco firms, it also bans the firms from sponsoring any
public event, 50 per cent of the packaging of tobacco is expected to be
used to warn the public of the risks involved in smoking.
Chukwu continued, he said the government would set up a standing
committee that would assist law enforcement agencies in implementing the
law. He said the present administration decided to work on the bill
because the provisions of a similar one passed into law in 2001 were
considered to be weak.
He listed some of the diseases linked to smoking to include
cardiovascular diseases such as heart attack and stroke; cancer,
especially that of the lung; as well as chronic respiratory disorder.
He recalled that a Global Youth Tobacco Survey conducted in 2008
showed that 15 per cent of children between 13 years and 15 years are
already smoking and another percentage exposed as passive smokers.
He said the Global Adult Tobacco Survey on its part showed that 10
percent of men in Nigeria smoke while 1.1 percent women smoke.
This, he explained, showed that almost six per cent of adults in Nigeria smoke.
He said, “This is not the first attempt in Nigeria to control the
use of tobacco in this country. In 1990 we had a decree which tried to
place some control on the sale and use of tobacco products and in 2001,
it was repealed and re-enacted to become the National Tobacco Control
Act of 2001.
“The whole idea is to make it stiffer, but when in 2004, Nigeria
along with other nations of the world signed the 2004 WHO framework
convention on tobacco control, there was then the need to bring our laws
in conformity because we actually as a country ratified that convention
the next year which was 2005.
“So that attempt by the Executive will eventually culminate in
the passage of a revised or amended Act as it were in 2011 by the sixth
session of the National Assembly.
“The bill is to protect Nigerians against the harmful effects of
tobacco. We know that tobacco is dangerous, tobacco is the cause of many
deaths and it causes so many illnesses.”
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