Thursday, 25 October 2007
EU Vote For a Full European Smoking Ban
The European Union has vote to impose complete bans on all work places, it would mean member states not being allowed to offer choice as many European Countries already do, excluding the UK of course despite a clear manifesto pledge by Blair to allow choice in hospitality. This type of decision must be vigorously challenged, not in support of smokers but in support of Freedom. Visit www.freedom2choose.info and join the fight
European Parliament calls for EU-wide ban on smoking in the workplace
The European Parliament, in its first response to a Commission consultation document, has called for wide ranging measures to restrict smoking in public places and make it harder for underage people to buy cigarettes. The report was adopted with 561 votes in favour, 63 against and 36 abstentions.
In a report drafted by Karl-Heinz Florenz, the European Parliament points out that 650,000 people a year die from smoking, including 80,000 from passive smoking, with children and unborn babies being particularly vulnerable. While 70% of Europeans are non-smokers, 86% are in favour of a ban on smoking at work, 84% in other public places, 61% in bars and pubs and 77% in restaurants.
MEPs therefore welcome the Commission's Green Paper "Towards a Europe free from tobacco smoke: policy options at EU level" but regard it only as a starting point. They urge the Commission to designate environmental tobacco smoke a class 1 carcinogen and recommend that Member States impose smoking bans in all enclosed workplaces within two years, including catering establishments, as well as in all enclosed public buildings and transport. If these objectives are not attained, the Commission is urged to submit a proposal for rules on the protection of non-smokers in the field of employment protection by 2011. The Commission is also asked to produce a report on the cost incurred to national health systems and the EU economy as a result of smoking and tobacco smoke.
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The EP believes Directive 2001/37/EC on tobacco products should be updated to toughen up the rules on tobacco additives, including those which are carcinogenic or addiction-enhancing. The report insists that the same directive include "a renewed library of larger, hard-hitting picture warnings", to be made mandatory "on all tobacco products sold in the European Union". MEPs also call on the Commission to urgently "investigate the health risks associated with consumption of snus and its impact on the consumption of cigarettes".
Finally, MEPs ask the Commission to examine measures such as introducing an EU-wide ban on the sale of tobacco products to people under 18 years of age, allowing cigarette machines to be placed only where they are inaccessible to minors, removing tobacco products from self-service displays in retail outlets and banning distance sales of tobacco products to young people (e.g. over the internet). In the same breath, the report calls on Member States to commit themselves "to reduce smoking among youth by at least 50% by 2025" and for the Commission to consider "an EU-wide high minimum level of taxation of tobacco products".
Directing their attention to their own workplace, MEPs call for the Parliament, "In the light of its duty to set an example, to adopt a smoking ban with no exemptions, in all areas of the House."
European Parliament calls for EU-wide ban on smoking in the workplace
The European Parliament, in its first response to a Commission consultation document, has called for wide ranging measures to restrict smoking in public places and make it harder for underage people to buy cigarettes. The report was adopted with 561 votes in favour, 63 against and 36 abstentions.
In a report drafted by Karl-Heinz Florenz, the European Parliament points out that 650,000 people a year die from smoking, including 80,000 from passive smoking, with children and unborn babies being particularly vulnerable. While 70% of Europeans are non-smokers, 86% are in favour of a ban on smoking at work, 84% in other public places, 61% in bars and pubs and 77% in restaurants.
MEPs therefore welcome the Commission's Green Paper "Towards a Europe free from tobacco smoke: policy options at EU level" but regard it only as a starting point. They urge the Commission to designate environmental tobacco smoke a class 1 carcinogen and recommend that Member States impose smoking bans in all enclosed workplaces within two years, including catering establishments, as well as in all enclosed public buildings and transport. If these objectives are not attained, the Commission is urged to submit a proposal for rules on the protection of non-smokers in the field of employment protection by 2011. The Commission is also asked to produce a report on the cost incurred to national health systems and the EU economy as a result of smoking and tobacco smoke.
Next column
The EP believes Directive 2001/37/EC on tobacco products should be updated to toughen up the rules on tobacco additives, including those which are carcinogenic or addiction-enhancing. The report insists that the same directive include "a renewed library of larger, hard-hitting picture warnings", to be made mandatory "on all tobacco products sold in the European Union". MEPs also call on the Commission to urgently "investigate the health risks associated with consumption of snus and its impact on the consumption of cigarettes".
Finally, MEPs ask the Commission to examine measures such as introducing an EU-wide ban on the sale of tobacco products to people under 18 years of age, allowing cigarette machines to be placed only where they are inaccessible to minors, removing tobacco products from self-service displays in retail outlets and banning distance sales of tobacco products to young people (e.g. over the internet). In the same breath, the report calls on Member States to commit themselves "to reduce smoking among youth by at least 50% by 2025" and for the Commission to consider "an EU-wide high minimum level of taxation of tobacco products".
Directing their attention to their own workplace, MEPs call for the Parliament, "In the light of its duty to set an example, to adopt a smoking ban with no exemptions, in all areas of the House."
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1 comments:
It comes as no surprise to me that the EU is attempting to impose it's nanny state rules on smoking.The EU is,after all run by control freaks(as are nearly all politicians) who have probably once smoked themselves but,having given it up now want everyone else to follow suit.They spend vast fortunes(of OUR money) on propaganda, safe in the knowledge that,if you tell the gullible public(well,MOST are) something often enough they'll eventually accept it as fact(remember the 80's advertisments informing us all that within 10 years one in three of us will contact aids? How many people PERSONALLY know of someone who has the disease? I can't name ONE(that is,of course not in any way to understate the devastation that this illness can inflict on anyone).
We all know that smoking too much is bad for us-but then so are a lot of things -the point is that it should be OUR choice! The establishment have used the tack of 'passive smoking' to scare the public into actually believing it as a scientific fact when,actually there is no concrete proof that it is any danger to the public.The professor who first established the 'link' between tobacco and cancer has been quoted as saying that the risk of developing the disease through 'passive smoking' is 'so small as not to be even worth talking about'
The problem is that the majority of people no longer smoke-so they don't really care about 'smokers rights' as it doesn't effect THEM(there's a song by the manic street preachers which says 'if you tolerate this then your children will be next'...in other words this bill may not effect YOU but,give them time and they WILL introduce one that DOES!).So,politicians being what they are will jump on the bandwagon as long as they feel it won't cost them votes.We smokers need to show them that it can and WILL- starting at the next election when our motto should be 'help stub out labour'(yes,I know it was a free vote but they introduced the bill)and,with this in mind,when the election gets closer I aim to start a web page to this effect.Hopefully it will attract publicity(though,of course NOT from the BBC who now seem lost for stories to cover) which just MIGHT put some pressure on our beloved rulers...watch this space!
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