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Strong tobacco control act to protect public health stressed


Published : 18 Jan 2024 09:58 PM

When it comes to preventing tobacco-related deaths, there is no alternative to strengthening tobacco control law, said speakers at a workshop on Thursday.

The workshop titled “Strengthening Tobacco Control Law: Progress, Obstacles and Way Forward” was held at the conference room of BMA Bhaban, according to a press release.

Research and anti-tobacco advocacy organization PROGGA (Knowledge for Progress) and Anti-Tobacco Media Alliance (ATMA) with support from Campaign for Tobacco Free Kids (CTFK), organized the workshop.

Around 28 journalists working in print, television, and online media, participated in the workshop, it said.

It was informed at the workshop that the draft amendment of the tobacco control law is awaiting the approval from the current Cabinet. Against this backdrop, tobacco companies have become desperate to eliminate some of the major provisions from the draft, such as abolishing designated smoking areas (DSAs), banning e-cigarettes, and vaping products, banning display of tobacco products or packets at points-of-sale, banning the sale of loose and unpacked tobacco products and so on.

However, there is no scope to get misled in this regard. The Health Services Division has included these proposed provisions in the draft amendment after reviewing the global best practices. It must be ensured that the draft amendment gets approved without any interference from the tobacco industry, the release said.

A recently published report (2024) by the World Health Organization (WHO) said, despite the continuous interference of tobacco companies, the usage of tobacco worldwide has reduced significantly. Currently (2022), one in five adults in the world use tobacco which was one in three just two decades ago (2000). The prevalence of tobacco use has also decreased in Bangladesh.

Unfortunately, 35.3 percent of adults (37.8 million) still use tobacco products. Tobacco claims on average 442 lives every day in Bangladesh. The Honorable Prime Minister Sheikh Hasina has expressed her determination to make Bangladesh tobacco free by 2040 to avoid the devastating consequences of tobacco on public health, it added

Former President of Bangladesh Federal Union of Journalists (BFUJ) Monjurul Ahsan Bulbul, Lead Policy Advisor for Campaign for Tobacco-Free Kids (CTFK)- Bangladesh Md. Mostafizur Rahman, Convener of ATMA Liton Haider, Co-Convener Mizan Chow­dhury and Executive Director of PROGGA ABM Zubair were present as discussants at the workshop. Hasan Shahriar, Project Head, Tobacco Control, PROGGA, delivered the key-note presentation before journalists.