Coalition backs call for tobacco industry inquiry
Smokefree Coalition backs call for tobacco industry inquiry
Smokefree Coalition media release
23 September
2009
The Smokefree Coalition fully endorses the Maori Affairs Select Committee’s call for the New Zealand tobacco industry to give an account of the role it plays in causing both sickness and early deaths among Maori.
Maori are more than twice as likely than non-Maori to smoke, and twice as likely to die as a result of smoking. Nearly a third of Maori deaths are attributable to tobacco and tobacco use is an important cause of health inequalities in New Zealand
Coalition Chair Robert Beaglehole said the Select Committee’s call for an inquiry into the tobacco industry is long overdue.
“For decades this industry has been marketing a product which damages its users and their families. It has no qualms about profiting while many of its customers die.
“The Smokefree Coalition commends the Maori Affairs Select Committee for taking a stand against an industry which deliberately targets its people, the young, the poor and the disadvantaged.
“The tobacco industry markets the cigarette as a symbol of freedom and personal choice, knowing that addiction robs people of the freedom to choose.
“Our society has been willing to tolerate this unethical marketing practice for too long and it is time that industry practices are exposed in a public forum.”
Professor Beaglehole highlighted examples of the industry’s deceptive practices including:
adding
chemicals to make tobacco more addictive while for years
denying cigarettes were addictive at all
encouraging
smoking by role models in movies watched by young
people
adding sweeteners to make cigarettes more
appealing to youth
covering up evidence about the dangers
of second-hand smoke
marketing light and mild cigarettes
as a healthier alternatives knowing they are equally
dangerous.
Robert Beaglehole, an Emeritus Professor at
the University of Auckland and Director of the Department of
Chronic Disease and Health Promotion at the World Health
Organization until 2007, said tobacco use is declining only
very slowly in New Zealand.
“The Smokefree Coalition is calling for immediate action to raise the tax on cigarettes, and especially roll your own tobacco, and a ban on point of sales displays of cigarettes. Both measures are supported by local and international evidence and will help prevent children from starting smoking.”
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