Friday 22 Nov 2024
By
main news image

KUALA LUMPUR (Nov 27): New Zealand's incoming conservative government will jettison world-leading measures to stub out smoking, AFP reported on Monday quoting new Prime Minister Christopher Luxon as saying, in a move described by health campaigners as a "huge win for the tobacco industry".

Unveiled under former prime minister Jacinda Ardern, the so-called "generational smoking ban" aimed to prohibit the sale of cigarettes to anyone born after 2008. But after being sworn in on Monday, Luxon confirmed New Zealand would scrap the laws before they came into effect, citing fears of a flourishing black market, according to an AFP report.

The report stated that while Luxon conceded the tax revenue from ongoing cigarette sales would also generate welcome revenue for the government, he stressed that it was "not the motivation for doing it".

Luxon was reported as saying that the cigarette ban would create "an opportunity for a black market to emerge, which would be largely untaxed".

AFP reported: The legislation, scheduled to start later this year, was designed to almost immediately reduce the number of people using tobacco products.

While the number of adults smoking in New Zealand is already relatively low at just 8%, the previous government had envisioned a future where the country was completely smoke-free.

As well as the steadily increasing age limit, the new law would have slashed the number of retailers able to sell tobacco products to a maximum of just 600 nationwide, a massive drop from the current figure of 6,000.

"This is a major loss for public health, and a huge win for the tobacco industry, whose profits will be boosted at the expense of Kiwi lives," anti-smoking group Health Coalition Aotearoa — the Maori name for New Zealand — has said in a statement.

Edited ByKang Siew Li
      Print
      Text Size
      Share