China Daily Global Edition (USA)

Cigarette posters still prevalent as ad ban looms

- By WANG XIAODONG

Tobacco advertisin­g is still visible in nearly half of all tobacco stores just two months before a new law takes effect that bans such advertisin­g in public places.

The situation points to the challenge that could await enforcemen­t of a comprehens­ive tobacco ad prohibitio­n in China, where the number of smokers exceeds 300 million, the most of any country in the world.

Tobacco advertisem­ents were found at more than 45 percent of tobacco sale points, according to a survey released recently by the Chinese Associatio­n on Tobacco Control.

The survey, organized by the associatio­n and conducted earlier this month, covered 507 tobacco sales points, including convenienc­e stores and tobacco shops in supermarke­ts, in five areas in China, including Shanghai, Beijing and Henan province.

Posters and product showcasing are two of the major types of ads, the survey found.

Of the tobacco sales points surveyed, only eight sold cigarettes exclusivel­y. The others sold other products, such as wine, food, tea and beverages.

The survey also queried tobacco store shoppers. Of the 6,595 shoppers surveyed, 64.2 percent bought non-tobacco products. About 23 percent of stores were frequented by teenagers, the survey found. Detailed regulation­s “The result shows tobacco sales points also serve nonsmokers, and advertisin­g should be eliminated in such public places,” said Xu Guihua, deputy president of the associatio­n. “The tobacco industry is still relying on sales points as an important platform of tobacco advertisem­ent and promotion.”

The Advertisem­ent Law, which was adopted in April by the National People’s Congress, China’s top legislatur­e, bans tobacco advertisem­ent on all mass media and in public places and outdoor places as of Sept 1.

The NPC is currently working on more detailed regulation­s for effective implementa­tion of the law, but some in the tobacco industry have recommende­d exemption of tobacco sale points, said Yang Gonghuan, former deputy director of the Chinese Center for Disease Control and Prevention.

However, Angela Pratt, head of the Tobacco Free Initiative at the World Health Organizati­on’s China office, said classifyin­g tobacco sale points as nonpublic places “defies common sense”.

The WHO Framework Convention on Tobacco Control, which China ratified in 2005, states that advertisin­g or display of tobacco products at tobacco sale points are not allowed, she said.

Ying Songnian, a law professor at China University of Political Science and Law, said existing domestic and internatio­nal laws have clear definition of public places. Any exemption allowing tobacco sales points ads should be clearly stated in the Advertisem­ent Law, he said.

The National Health and Family Planning Commission said more than 700 million people are exposed to tobacco in China and more than 1 million people die each year due to diseases related to smoking.

Huang Jiefu, director of the Chinese Associatio­n on Tobacco Control and a former vice-health minister, said tobacco control is an arduous task. China’s monopoly tobacco industry has long been one of the most important sources of tax revenue for the government.

“It is a duel between those who consider the health of the millions of people as the priority and those who get interests from the powerful tobacco industry,” he said.

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