Side with Nigerians on Tobacco
Control Regulations!
Speech by Akinbode
Oluwafemi, deputy executive director, Environmental Rights Action/Friends of
the Earth Nigeria (ERA/FoEN) at the unveiling of a billboard in Abuja to press home demands for adoption of Regulations for
Implementation of the National Tobacco Control Act 2015
Gentlemen and ladies of the
press,
Let me start this unveiling
exercise by first extending to you on behalf of the Environmental Rights
Action/Friends of the Earth Nigeria (ERA/FoEN) and other anti-tobacco groups in
the country, a most heartfelt welcome and our honest thanks for your devotion
and consistency anytime we reach out to you on matters that concern public
health.
We want to thank you for this and
encourage you to continue highlighting issues that bother on our wellness as
individuals, communities and as a nation.
Without mincing words, we must
inform you ofthe stage we are in regarding the implementation of the National
Tobacco Control (NTC) Act 2015: The Federal Ministry of Health is still
fleshing out regulations for its effective implementation which will be
transmitted to the National Assembly for approval.
This is therefore a very crucial
time because, between the periods the NTC Act was signed into lawin 2015 and
the inauguration of the National Tobacco Control Committee (NATOCC)by the
Honourable Minister of Health, Professor Isaac Adewole, and now,the tobacco
industry has not relented in the trade we know too well.
We have recorded a lot of
shocking developments that encourage us to demand expedited action on the
tobacco control regulations. We have recorded among others, Philip Morris
International Nigeria Limited (PMINTL) illicit cigarette imports from Senegal, an
unwarranted aspersion on the integrity of NATOCC members by the Initiative for
Public Policy Analysis (IPPA) - a group that was in the fore of British America
Tobacco Nigeria (BATN) campaign for a sufficiently weakened tobacco law in
Nigeria, andnow the unrelenting marketing gimmicks targeted at our kids.
The attempt to get our kids
hooked through kiosks and other Point of Sale (POS) near schools is now a big
issue not only in Nigeria but across Africa. In Cameroun, Togo, Uganda to list
a few countries, these things are happening. Our concern however is that Nigeria
still remains the biggest market for the tobacco industry on the African
continent because of its teeming population of vibrant youths. In virtually all
the states of the federation, street corners and around schools have been
targeted by the tobacco death merchants to market new flavours of cigarettes.
Is it not very disturbing to know that there are orange, vanilla and Amarula
flavours of cigarettes now being openly displayed and sold to capture the
attention of our kids and addict them to smoking?
With the aforementioned, the
question that may then agitate your minds is: Why are we putting up this
billboard? And why this location? For us, the unveiling of this billboard is
not the mere ceremony of a big and colourful advertisement. It is not competition
over a product. This is an innovation in
getting our advocacy messages on public health to our esteemed lawmakers who
have the onerous task of approving the tobacco control regulations for
effective implementation of the NTC Act.
The message we have on the board
is also intended to resonate with our kids who are intelligent and will ask
their parents what the issues are. They will ask questions and we will have to
answer them.
For the wider public, the
billboard is like a television set that you cannot switch off. It is always
there, they will always see it. Unlike television or magazine adverts, you
cannot flip the channel or turn the page. So, for our lawmakers who traverse
this route daily, they cannot miss itand the messagewill stick. Most
importantly we want it to galvanise them to action.
As we preach this message using
this outdoor medium, we are also asking the Ministry of Health to expedite
action on the NTC regulations for the full implementation of the Act.
We have said it time and again, delay
is dangerous. The time to Act is now!
Thank You
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