Home ›› National

TOBACCO CONTROL LAW

ATMA for quick passage of draft amendment

Staff Correspondent
21 Jun 2023 15:58:39 | Update: 21 Jun 2023 16:14:23
ATMA for quick passage of draft amendment
— Representational Photo

Anti-Tobacco Media Alliance (ATMA) on Wednesday raised the demand for a quick passage of the draft amendment of the tobacco control law.

The organisation made such demand during a meeting held at the BMA Bhaban in Dhaka, read a press release.

It was informed during the event that tobacco companies have become desperate to eliminate the proposed ban on e-cigarettes and vape products included in the draft amendment of the tobacco control law.

To cloud the judgment of the policymakers, these companies have even started spreading fabricated information about the World Health Organization (WHO) and other international anti-tobacco organizations.

Notably, WHO has identified e-cigarettes and vape products as a serious threat to health, and a number of 32 countries, including India, Sri Lanka, Thailand, and Singapore have already banned these products accordingly, the release added.

The Ministry of Health and Family Welfare (MoHFW) has included several key provisions in the draft amendment proposals which will transform the existing tobacco control law into one of the best in the world.

Some of these proposed provisions are- eliminating Designated Smoking Areas (DSAs), banning the display of tobacco products, outlawing so-called corporate social responsibility (CSR) programs of tobacco companies, banning the sale of all sorts of loose tobacco products, banning the production, import, export, storage, promotion, and sale of e-cigarettes and vape products (ENDS), increasing the area allotted for graphic health warning (GHW) to 90 per cent from existing 50 per cent.

Urging the government to ensure a quick passage of the amendment, ATMA claims that the longer it takes for the government to pass the amendment, the higher tobacco-related deaths and losses will rise. Additionally, the network urges the policymakers not to get confused by the lies propagated by tobacco companies and some organisations fixated on protecting the interest of the tobacco industry.

In the presence of 40 ATMA members, Co-convener Mizan Chowdhury, and Mehadi Hasan of PROGGA (Knowledge for Progress) shed light on ongoing organisational activities and future courses of action.

Bangladesh Lead Policy Advisor for Campaign for Tobacco-Free Kids (CTFK) Md Mostafizur Rahman, Convener Mortuza Haider Liton, and Member-Secretary ABM Zubair also were present among the participants.

×