Tag: Tobacco

  • Tobacco: Groups hail Senate, Senator Tinubu

    Tobacco: Groups hail Senate, Senator Tinubu

    Two major tobacco control groups, the Nigeria Tobacco Control Research Group (NTCRG) and Environmental Rights Action/Friends of the Earth Nigeria (ERA/FoEN), have commended the Senate for passing  a resolution seeking total ban of the sale of tobacco products around schools.

    The groups also hailed Senator Oluremi Tinubu who sponsored the resolution, saying she has “demonstrated uncommon courage at this point that tobacco addiction is becoming an endemic problem among the youth.”

    The resolution, which was adopted at the floor of the Senate on Tuesday, urged  the Federal Ministries of Health, Education and Information to harmonise efforts at banning the advertisement and sales of tobacco within 100 metres of all schools in Nigeria.

    It also requested the Federal Ministry of Health and other relevant enforcement agencies to ensure the “comprehensive prohibition of Tobacco Advertising Promotion and Sponsorship; work with other agencies to ban advertisement and location of Point of Sales (POS) of tobacco products within 100m of all schools; create a framework for the monitoring of the implementation of the ban on single sticks and cigarette packs with less than 20 sticks as detailed in the National Tobacco Control Act, 2015.”

    The Coordinator NTCRG, Dr Akindele Adebiyi said: “we particularly applaud the the bold effort of the Senate, Senator Tinubu and other co-sponsors of this resolution. It is a giant step towards protecting our children from the deliberate marketing tactics of the tobacco companies aimed at luring our children to smoking. We want to plead with relevant agencies to put in place necessary mechanisms to ensure that this Resolution is given immediate attention and enforcement”.

  • Group seek enforcement of tobacco control Act

    Group seek enforcement of tobacco control Act

    Civil society groups under the auspices of Environmental Rights Action/Friends of the Earth Nigeria (ERA/FoEN) and National Tobacco Control Alliance (NTCA) have urged the Federal Government to urgently enforce the National Tobacco Control (NTC) Act.

    Speaking in Lagos yesterday at a press conference tagged: Enforcing Tobacco Control Act is Everyone’s Duty, Deputy Executive Director of ERA/FoEN, Akinbode Oluwafemi stressed that the time to enforce the law was now.

    The groups expressed worries that there was yet no concrete action to show that the Federal Ministry of Health was determined to implement the Act, which was signed into law in 2015.

    According to Akinbode it has been three years after which Minister of Health, Professor Isaac Adewole, announced the commencement of the enforcement of nine key provisions of the Act, yet the Tobacco industry was having a field day addicting Nigerian kids into smoking.

    Citing some of the provisions to include: Prohibition of sale of tobacco products to and by anyone below 18; Ban of sale or offer for sale or distribution of tobacco or tobacco products through mail, internet or online devices; Prohibition of interference of tobacco industry in public health and related issues; among others, Akinbode lamented that since the Minister’s announcement of the provision, federal government is yet to commence serious public education as well as clampdown on violations.

    On his part, the NTCA Programmes Director, Oluseun Esan enjoined government at all levels to begin the enforcement of the nine key provisions of the NTC Act that do not require regulations such as smoke-free public places, restriction on underage access and ban of sale of single sticks, among others.

    “Relevant government agencies such as the Consumer Protection Council (CPC) and security agencies should begin clampdown on infractions. There is need for the commencement of mass public education to be spearheaded by the Ministry of Health and the National Orientation Agency (NOA), he said.

    The society according to Akinbode also have major role to play to have a tobacco free society. Akinbode urged parent to monitor their wards closely and never smoke in the presence of their children.

    “The Ministry of Health should urgently send the draft regulations to the National Assembly for approval as soon as they receive it, while Nigeria should imitate Kenya, Tanzania and Rwanda that have banned shisha use and bars,” Akinbode stated.

  • Tobacco and the spirit of the season

    The Yuletide season has always been exploited by manufacturers of consumer goods to unveil new products to whet the appetite of an insatiable public. In this season people eat more, drink more, party more and are tempted to even embark on some excesses, no thanks to the appeal created by manufacturers and marketing agencies. Just like it is for adults, so also, for the adventurous under-aged who will always try new things.

    Among the horde of businesses jostling for a bounty as the Christmas and New Year celebrations near, are tobacco merchants who, without fail, refine their marketing strategies yearly to grab new lungs while strengthening their stranglehold on existing smokers.  Apart from the regular cigarettes, other tobacco products—including pipes, smokeless tobacco, and sisha —are now gaining acceptance among Nigerian youths.

    It is not out of place to posit that the tobacco industry’s campaign to replace a dying generation of aged smokers, like previous years, will gravitate towards parties and other fun activities where it will be easy to entice kids to smoking.

    This was done a few years ago by a tobacco market leader in Nigeria when it kick-started a controversial Secret Smoking Party through which school-age pupils were inducted into smoking. Activists at the time discovered that the company invited the unsuspecting youngsters from a host of schools to the parties which held across several states.  At the parties they were encouraged to light up for the first time in their lives.

    When the news got to the media, it was denied that it targeted the under-aged but they could not provide convincing argument on the logic behind inviting school kids to parties that held from dusk to dawn under an environment dominated by heavy music and plumes of its lethal products. While it is believed that the parties are still being held more clandestinely, the company has also been explored newer strategies of maintaining its hold on kids.

    A recent report by the Environmental Rights Action and the Nigeria Tobacco Control Research Group titled Big Tobacco, Tiny Targets Nigeria Report details a far more insidious approach to getting kids addicted to smoking.

    The report, conducted in five states – Enugu, Kaduna, Lagos, Oyo and Nassarawa – showed how tobacco multinationals deliberately situated kiosks and placed adverts near schools, and open places that children frequent to buy sweets and candies. The aim is to expose the kids to enticing and flavoured packs of cigarettes, thereby indirectly tempting them to buy and try them. That decision to try the products might be all it takes to hook them to cigarettes for life.

    The task of ensuring these dangers are nipped in the bud rests with all of us, starting with the Federal Ministry of Health which must demonstrate seriousness in implementing the National Tobacco Control (NTC) Act by the kick-start of enforcement of nine of its provisions that do not require any form of regulations. Minister of Health, Professor Isaac Adewole announced the provisions on May 31, 2017 as a gift to Nigerians on the occasion of the World No Tobacco Day.

    Most important however, is that at the home front, parents have the pivotal role of stopping their wards from drifting the way of the smoke.  Acting as role models is very important, but it takes much more than acting to prevent kids from taking to the stick. Parents must also work against negative influences outside that threaten their kids.

    Merry Christmas and a smoke-free new year to Nigerians!

     

    • Micheal Okpara Asaba, Delta State

     

  • Group hails govt’s bid to increase tax on tobacco

    The Youth Action on Tobacco Control and Health (YATCH) has lauded the Federal Government’s plan to increase tobacco tax.

    Its Executive Director, Seye Omiyefa, made the commendation in an interview with the News Agency of Nigeria (NAN) in Lagos.

    According to him, the increase will go a long way to save Nigerians from direct and second hand smoking which have harmful health effects.

    NAN reports that Minister of Health, Prof. Isaac Adewole, on Wednesday said the government might increase tax on tobacco to check abuse and prevent smuggling of tobacco products into the country.

    Omiyefa advocated quick implementation of the plan.

    “I will like to commend the efforts of the minister of health toward reducing the rate of people dying due to tobacco-related diseases. One of the ways to achieve this is by increasing tax on tobacco products.

    “It is no longer news that every year Nigeria loses all cadres of manpower and all categories of statesmen and leaders to tobacco-related deaths,’’ he said.

     

  • The SHISHA pandemic

    The SHISHA pandemic

    NOBODY remembers the three-year-old, or thereabouts, who sucked hungrily on a shisha pipe. Few people commit to memory, footage of the girl-child, that incited awe and contempt as she expertly smoked tobacco, aided by her male guardian. Judging by the video, it wasn’t her first time.

    Soon after her video went viral on the internet, Nigeria forgot her chatter and animated laughter. Government and child rights groups ignored the toddler and the cloud of smoke that tarnished her beauty like corroded steel. It hardly matters that she sucked on tobacco and chemicals while kids her age sucked on toffees and candy sticks. Yet imagery of the minor incites foreboding, pallid and stark, like a moment’s apparition meant to be an everlasting tragedy.

    Ask Aderoju Abolore. “That video and that child depict all that is wrong with modern society and all that is wrong with Nigeria. Only a criminal would give an under-five girl, shisha to smoke,” said the 51-year-old preschool psychologist.

    As Nigeria recovered from the shock of the child smoker, another spectre crept on the internet in common hours. It was the picture of a five-year-old boy smoking shisha while staring at an Apple iPhone device. A Nigerian man, Falex Oluwagbotemi, shared pictures of the minor replying critics that “He’s over five years; he knows what is good for him.” But soon after the post went viral, attracting condemnations, he took to his Facebook page to deny the child claiming his post was all a joke.

    The lust for shisha is hardly a joke in modern Nigeria. Shisha is a glass-bottomed water pipe in which fruit-flavoured tobacco is coated with foil and heated with charcoal. The tobacco fume travels through a water cavity and is inhaled deeply and leisurely. Smokers claim it tastes silky and smells sweet, making it a pleasurable, unhurried treat.

    The age of indulgence plummets as young adults, underage teens and minors descend into the cesspool of shisha addiction. For instance, Lana, 22, is addicted to shisha because it transports her to “seventh heaven.” Thus every day is party hour to her.

    On a stormy evening in April, Lana’s voice cracked through her still balcony in Maiduguri, Borno State. It pirouetted across the terrace, like worn boots rifling through dry stalks on a grassy plain. “Hurry, before he closes,” she said, in a parched, dead beat voice.

    The 22-year-old slapped crisp Naira notes into teenage underling, Awaal’s outstretched palm and the latter bolted away, sprinting through the gates and across the city to purchase fruit-flavoured tobacco for Lana’s shisha pot.

    Besides Awaal’s desperate need to return early, she must get home in time, to beat Borno’s 10 pm curfew and before her husband returns. Her home is a 15-minute drive from her mentor, Lana’s apartment, on University Road, opposite the University of Maiduguri (UNIMAID), Maiduguri, Borno State.

    Soon after Awaal’s departure, Lana, a volunteer of a Borno-based United Nations’ multilateral agency, invited the reporter and one of her male colleagues into her room from their perch on the balcony. The invitation was too juicy to ignore.

    Inside, the five teenage girls who arrived separately at Lana’s doorstep earlier in the day, had ditched their long, flowing apparels for skimpy clothing. Three of them wore flimsy camisoles and bum shorts. One had stripped to a bathing suit and the last girl was in purple pant and brassiere.

    The latter lay supine on their hostess’ bed while her four scantily clad mates hovered around a glass table bearing shisha paraphernalia: charcoal and pot, coal and pipe, marijuana (Indian hemp) and shisha. They sent Awaal to get more flavours to mask the scent of marijuana they intended to smoke with shisha. In the interval, they engaged in loud banter and swayed to music thumping from Lana’s giant woofers.

    “The neighbours talk too much. If they smell marijuana, they will start another crazy rumour about me. But they are a bunch of hypocrites. The men make love overtures to me in private and their wives sneak in to smoke with me, soon after their husbands depart for work,” said Lana.

    On Awaal’s arrival, she deposited peach, chocolate, mint, strawberry and apple flavours on the table, grinning awkwardly and apologising for her lateness. Swiftly, she prepared the fruit- flavoured tobacco with marijuana and stepped back from the table in an exaggerated display of modesty. Lana, being the hostess and leader of the crew, took the first drag. Then to the displeasure of her guests, she invited Awaal to take a puff. The 15-year-old hurried to the pipe and drew on it with relish. She sucked repeatedly while Lana cheered her on, complimenting her for being a ‘hard girl.’

    “Now, you can go home and deal with the man,” Lana said jocularly and handed Awaal some money. Awaal accepted the tip with profuse thanks and hurried home. At her departure, Lana and friends converged on the pipe. They passed it round and each girl took a deep puff. They brought out two bottles of dry gin from the fridge, spiced each bottle heavily with an assortment of cough syrup containing codeine. Then they sucked deeply on the pipe and drank straight from the bottle.

    They were high and the ecstasy on their faces told manic stories of addiction and subdued grief; they claimed to drown their sorrows by “tripping” (getting high). When a member of the crew requested for a cup, they ridiculed her for being too soft. “You no hard at all!” Lana chided her. As the effect of the drugs dawned on them, two members of the crew leapt to their feet, gyrating to a raunchy club mix blaring from their hostess’ music box . They sang out loud to the tune, in a rendition laced with strong Kanuri accent. Soon, they began to hump against each other, their eyes glazed over, in blatant simulation of kinky sex.

    Few minutes into their act, they were tugging on their bum shorts and tops teasingly, to reveal glimpses of flesh. Their mates egged them on maniacally. None of them cared that they had male company. They simply basked in the thrill that caused their pretty friends to unclothe their hidden graces, to the nudge and weird buzz of shisha and marijuana, codeine and dry gin.

    “See as dem dey trip (They are high),” said Lana with a knowing grin.

     

    ‘High’ way to the grave

    If there was a tragedy in getting high, Lana and friends were unperturbed by its likelihood. Unforeseen tragedies are part of life, Lana would eagerly tell you. The 22-year-old revealed that Layi, a childhood friend died recently,  in a car crash. “On that fateful day, she was high on shisha and marijuana. She drank too much too. But she ignored my plea to sober up before driving home. She ran into a ditch on Damboa road. She was rushing to get home before her father. If she had listened to me, she would be alive today. She was too scared of her father, an ordinary man. Now she is dead,” said Lana.

    “Yes, Layi’s death was tragic. I am yet to recover from the shock. I miss her. We used to have fun. Layi danced really well. We used to go clubbing at Hotbites (a nightclub) until government shut the club,” said 19-year-old Sandra, a jewellery sales apprentice and native of Askira Uba, Borno State.

    Corroborating her, Sonia, 17, stated that the government ruined everything with the curfew. “At first, we sneaked out to have fun. We know most of the vigilantes and officers manning the checkpoints, hence they let us move about without hindrance. But when the government outlawed and shut down Hotbites, life deserted this town.”

    The divorcee and mother of two revealed that she wasn’t sure she would quit ‘using.’ She is not sure she would remarry either. “My last suitor backed out because of my smoking habit. Any man who would marry me must accept me for who I am ,” she said.

     

    Awaal’s story

    A subsequent encounter with Awaal revealed that she started smoking at age 13. “My late boyfriend taught me to smoke cigarette and Indian hemp. He was a tricycle driver and he died in a suicide bomb blast at the market,” she said.

    Awaal was forcibly married to her uncle’s friend in 2015; because she “didn’t love him,” she devised a means of sleeping with him. “I smoked hemp and drank alcohol laced with codeine. If I don’t get alcohol, I take two bottles of codeine. The euphoria I feel from the drug dulls my brain to the act,” she said.

    Now 15, Awaal is unperturbed that she lost her first pregnancy. “I wanted to lose that baby. I ate a lot of bad roots to abort it. I smoked and drank heavily too,” she said, adding that she eats a lot of mint leaves and blackseeds to hide the smell of marijuana and codeine.

    “I will stop using drugs when I marry the man I love. I will remarry when my husband dies. He will die very soon. He is old and sickly,” she said confidently.

     

    Shisha and hemp, soft drink and codeine…

    Underage girls like Awaal comprise the bulk of Nigeria’s teeming shisha addicts. Many of them resort to hard drugs to escape their lives’ harsh realities. “There wouldn’t be much cause for alarm if they smoked shisha alone. But they don’t. Many of them mix it with hard drugs, like marijuana, cocaine, adulterated street crack and so on,” said Hadiza Abdullahi, a Borno-based ‘youth counsellor and anti-drug campaigner.’

    Abdullahi, 23, admitted that she was hooked on alcohol and codeine, until she understood the dangers of her addiction and agreed to check into a rehab in Lagos at her family’s intervention.

    But while Abdullahi regained sanity and rediscovered purpose in Lagos, several youths of the coastal city, most of them, underage, are lost in a fog of shisha and hemp fumes.

    Modupeola Odunlami, 18, sold her mother’s necklace and pendant (valued at N387, 000) at N18, 000, to purchase three cartons of codeine and expensive gin. The drug stash was her passport to eminence and acceptance by peer in her posh, private school.

    Luck however, ran out on the teenager in school as she was caught smoking marijuana with shisha and drinking carbonated drinks with codeine syrup. Immediately, the school authorities contacted her mom.

    “I was advised to take her to rehab but she threatened to kill herself if I did. I was too scared, I felt her addiction had spiritual roots so I took her to church. But she ended up running away from the church. We found her six days later, at a family friend’s house. She was famished and looked underfed. Luckily, she agreed to go home with us. From there, we bundled her to a rehab centre,” said Kikelomo, the teenager’s mom.

    There is no gainsaying that shisha addiction is a trending pop culture among the youth, teenagers in particular. Further findings revealed that many high school kids have devised several methods of “tripping” (getting high).

    “We spiced Coca Cola with codeine to get high. The dark colour of the drink hides the presence of codeine. We used to sneak out of the hostel to smoke shisha and hemp too,” revealed Yinka Ogae-Henshaw. The 17-year-old was expelled from her school’s hostel in Benin, after being caught cooking noodles with marijuana.

    “I was expelled and my mother sent me to Lagos to live with my father,” she said.

     

    A troubling trend

    Recent findings in Kaduna, Kano, Abuja, Sokoto, Benue, Borno, Plateau, Lagos and Ogun states reveal high incidence of addiction among the youth.  The relative cheapness and accessibility to the drugs makes it easy for the youth to acquire them.

    For instance, a small pack of fruit-flavoured tobacco sells at N300 or more depending on the point of purchase, while the cost of smoking shisha at a bar ranges from N2,000 to N50,000 depending on the location and associative drugs used to spice the stash.

    A mixture of shisha and skunk or shisha and cocaine would normally cost higher than ordinary shisha. “But nobody smokes ordinary shisha, not even those small boys and girls (high school teenagers),” revealed Chiedu Okpara, deputy manager of a Lagos nightclub.

    The prices of shisha pots range from N10, 000 to N75, 000 depending on the source. “The imported pots are more expensive. This is because they depict class and sophistication of the user,” said Okpara. Okpara claims he does not supply clients with skunk or cocaine.

    “I only import and supply shisha paraphernalia to users in Lagos and other parts of the country,” he said.

    So rampant is the addiction that users have graduated from visiting nightclubs and shisha cafes to ownership of shisha paraphernalia in their homes. Medical experts however, fret over the dangerous dimensions of the burgeoning addiction.

    “Users tend to expose themselves to dangerous diseases. It’s a common trend in most nightclubs and shisha joints to see youth sharing shisha pots and pipes. The smoking equipment are rarely cleaned before being passed from one user to the other. That is very dangerous, users may contract deadly diseases in that manner,” said Tunde Agboluaje, a medical doctor.

     

    Why you are addicted to shisha

    “It is sad that many shisha users are ignorant of its dangers. The flavours of shisha simply hide the harmful effects of the main ingredient that makes the user an addict in the long run. Shisha smokers have the misconception that the smoke in shisha is safe because the water absorbs the amount of nicotine present in the smoke, making it completely harmless. It’s a wrong notion,” said Mabel Onu, a clinical lab scientist.

    The tobacco used for a shisha pipe, she said, is not the same as cigarette tobacco. “It’s fresh tobacco leaves that haven’t been doctored or cut with any chemicals to make people get addicted to it. This doesn’t make it safer than cigarettes because it’s still smoking tobacco, and it has all the tars and nicotine of a cigarette, with up to 100 times the amount of smoke passing through the lips,” she said.

    Medical, scientific findings revealed that the active substance in shisha tobacco is administered by burning the leaves and inhaling the vaporised gas that results. This quickly and effectively delivers substances into the bloodstream by absorption in the lungs. The inhaled substances trigger chemical reactions in nerve endings, this release of dopamine; which is associated with the feeling of pleasure. When tobacco is smoked, most of the nicotine is pyrolyzed or decomposed through high heat.

    However, a dose sufficient to cause mild somatic dependency and mild to strong psychological dependency remains. This seems to play an important role in nicotine addiction—probably by facilitating a dopamine release, as a response to nicotine stimuli. Thus a shisha smoker is still smoking tobacco and the nicotine in it causes dependence after using it several times.

     

    Perils of shisha addiction

    According to research carried out by the World Health Organisation (WHO), the volume of smoke inhaled in an hour-long shisha session is estimated to be the equivalent of smoking between 100 and 200 cigarettes. The estimated findings go on to show that, on average, a smoker will inhale half a litre of smoke per cigarette, while a shisha smoker can take in anything from just under a sixth of a litre to a litre of smoke per inhale.

    “Many smokers argue that shisha is less harmful than cigarettes because the tobacco is flavoured and vapourised. This is a great lie. The carcinogens and nicotine are still there. Hence shisha smokers like cigarette smokers are at risk of developing respiratory problems, heart disease or cancer,” noted Fidelis Akinmolayan, a medical lab scientist.

     

    Study confirms prevalence of drug abuse among youths

    A recent study carried out by a team of scientists and researchers from the University of Uyo, Akwa Ibom State, sought to determine the prevalence of drug abuse by Nigerian youths by comparing the pattern of substance use in two cities, Uyo and Kiru, Kano State respectively.

    The study was carried out at two Rehabilitation Centres: Uyo and Kiru Rehabilitation Centres. The study revealed that while alcohol is used commonly in Uyo, inhalants such as glue, petrol, formalin and shoe polish are consumed in large quantities in Kiru. Also in the study, about 35% of inmates from Uyo and 43% from Kiru used Indian hemp, 7% and 15% used cocaine, while 5% and 12% used heroin respectively. This according to the researchers, is a very dangerous trend in view of the associated health hazards.

    At the backdrop of their findings looms a troubling shisha-marijuana and codeine addiction even as medical experts argue that smoking is harmful to health, be it shisha or cigarette smoke. According to the Chief Medical Director (CMD), Eko Hospital, Olusegun Odukoya, “Smoking is a leading cause of cancer and death from cancer. It causes cancer of the lungs lung, esophagus, larynx, mouth, throat, kidney, bladder, liver, pancreas, stomach, cervix, colon and rectum, as well as acute myeloid leukemia.”

    There is need for people to be educated on dangers of smoking especially smokers at motor parks and market places, he said, at the Stop Smoking Programme, held in Ikeja, Lagos recently.

     

    ‘Shisha sale and smoking should be regulated’

    Rekiya Adamu, a social worker and child psychologist, suggested that government regulates shisha joints. “Let government impose strict regulation of shisha smoking in indoor public places. Operators of nightclubs shouldn’t be allowed to offer shisha on their menu unless they have license to do so. And  government should be unsparing in scrutiny of individuals allowed to operate shisha joints. Wherever they are found to spice shisha with marijuana, cocaine or other hard drugs, they should be arrested and prosecuted,” she said.

    It would be recalled that wife of Nigeria’s President, Aisha Buhari, raised an alarm early this year when she visited Kano State. She said northern youth, including women, were wasting their lives with drug abuse. She urged political and religious leaders in the region to urgently find solution to the menace.

    Tobacco use kills more than seven million people annually and costs over 1.4 trillion dollars in healthcare expenditure and lost productivity, according to Dr. Margaret Chan, Director-General of the World Health Organisation (WHO).

    Chan warned that tobacco’s killer toxins also wreak havoc on the environment and

    called on governments to ban tobacco marketing and advertising, promote plain product packaging, raise excise taxes and make indoor public places and workplaces smoke-free.

    While such measures may be effective in combating the scourge of cigarette smoking, they fall flat on the face in checking shisha sale and addiction.

    Shisha enthusiasts contend that its  smoke is harmless even as medical experts argue otherwise.

    “It poses greater danger when laced with marijuana, skunk, cocaine and other hard drugs. Gradually, it rids the smoker of control and sanity, leaving them dependent and at the mercy of hard drugs,” said Ngozi Edet, a clinical health psychiatrist.

    “Drug addicts are the same all over. It doesn’t matter if they smoke skunk, cocaine or marijuana through shisha. Their addiction is no different than the user who injects heroin or cocaine directly into the vein. They all need help, very urgent intervention,” stated Olu Akintunde, a counsellor and addiction therapist.

    Addicts have been known to commit grievous acts of recklessness driven by lust for a quick fix. Just recently, a teenage drug addict sold two of his father’s Sports Utility Vehicles (SUV), valued at N7.5 million, for N350, 000 in Umuahia, Abia State, to buy hard drugs, revealed Akingbade Bamidele , the Commander, NDLEA, Abia State. Bamidele said the teenager was later brought to the agency’s facility for counseling and rehabilitation.

    Many teen addicts, while in their addiction’s dependent stage are desperate to do anything and sell any valuable to get hard drugs. “You notice when things begin to miss at home that something is wrong,” said Bamidele.

    But no one knows when ‘something is wrong’ with drug addicts like Lana, her late friend, Layi, and her crew of surviving smokers. As they ‘trip’ away in plain sight, a more dangerous culture ensues, challenging the mores of modern society. It is the emergence of child smokers, like the three-year-old or thereabouts, whose lust for shisha awakened Nigeria to forebodings of yet another addiction plague.

    Nobody knows the name of the child but her innocent chatter and laughter whets the brain like a hunter’s knife. Through the haze of tobacco fumes, you could see her puff and chant: “Shisha! Shisha!” in the tenor of a child grappling with the yoke of an adult lust. Child, video and shisha incite a muddle of awe and quiet rage.

  • Tobacco: Group urges government to implement public health policies

    Tobacco: Group urges government to implement public health policies

    The Center for Communication Programs Nigeria (CCPN) has called for effective health policies to reduce the use of tobacco products in Nigeria.
    In a message to mark this year’s World Health Organisation (WHO) World No Tobacco Day (WNTD), the Executive Director, CCPN, Mrs. Babafunke Fagbemi said tobacco use is a threat to Nigeria’s development and a great health risk that affect other sectors and the economic well-being of Nigerians.
    Speaking in Abuja, Fagbemi urged the Federal Government to immediately implement public health measures that would protect Nigerians from the dangers of smoking including the comprehensive implementation of the National Tobacco Control Bill.
    The group noted that unrestricted use and access to tobacco products is a threat to the achievement of the Sustainable Development Goals (SDG).
    While commending the Federal Ministry of Health under the leadership of Professor Isaac Adewole for taking the lead in the fight against non-communicable diseases in the country, Fagbemi said the Federal Government’s bold step in signing the National Tobacco Control Bill into law is a major step towards achieving a tobacco free Nigeria.
    ” We want to commend the Federal Ministry of Health for putting public health in the front burner and we hope that all stakeholders would rally round to support the initiatives of the Ministry in taking tobacco control forward from where we are today,” she said.
    According to the WHO, tobacco kills over seven million people every year and it is a risk factor in non-communicable (NCDs), including cardiovascular disease, cancers and chronic obstructed pulmonary disease.
    ” We need to take a holistic look at our public health structure and take adequate measures to prevent diseases that will hinder the achievement of the Sustainable Development Goals. The WHO has made it clear about the dangers of tobacco use not only to the smoker but others around. Tobacco control is a great step towards the fulfillment of the 2030 Sustainable Development Agenda.
    ” We need to look at the dangers of second hand smoking especially to the young children, Nigeria is already battling to eradicate malaria which is one of the greatest killer diseases of young children in Nigeria, we must ensure that we do not add to the burden of Nigerians by not taking action against tobacco use,” Fagbemi said.
    Fagbemi also said the core role of communication in promoting awareness and well-being should not be overlooked as she called on all stakeholders to articulate the process of creating awareness on the dangers of tobacco use especially to the youths.
    The theme for this year’s WNTD is “Tobacco: A threat to Development” and it is aimed at highlighting the link between tobacco use and development. The celebration is also to highlight the fact that tobacco control can break the cycle of poverty, contribute to ending hunger, promote sustainable agriculture and economic growth, and combat climate change.
    The CCPN, a non-governmental organisation that focuses on the central role of communication in social and behavior change for development also said it is ready to continue to provide the platforms that would ensure the well-being of all Nigerians.

  • Fighting tobacco epidemic

    Sir: We are encouraged by recent moves by the federal government to implement the National Tobacco Control Act (NTCA). The Minister of Health, Professor Isaac Folorunsho Adewole at the inauguration of the National Tobacco Control Committee (NTCC) indicated that the government plans to introduce pictorial health warnings (PHWs) on tobacco packages and is considering raising taxes on tobacco products.

    PHWs and tobacco taxation are two of the measures in the international treaty, the Framework Convention on Tobacco Control (FCTC). Nigeria became an FCTC Party in 2005; today there are 43 parties in Africa and 180 worldwide, representing nearly 90 percent of the world’s people.

    Study after study has demonstrated that PHWs are more effective than text-only warnings at communicating the dangers of smoking to prospective smokers, especially young people. Remember: one-half of smokers will die of a smoking-related disease, so it is essential to prevent young people from starting and becoming addicted. PHWs also more effectively provoke current smokers to consider quitting.

    Increasing the cost of tobacco, including by raising taxes, is proven to be the most effective way to get smokers to reduce the amount they smoke and to prevent children and youth from starting. Because the measure is so effective, the tobacco industry lobbies loud and hard against any proposed tax increase, arguing that it will result in cigarette smuggling.

    The industry’s strategy is simple. It tries to scare off governments by twisting facts and data, particularly about what happens after significant tax increases are put in place. However, what the industry always fails to mention is that the countries with the highest tax rates have some of the lowest smuggling rates, in part because they devote resources to fighting illicit trade, within their borders and in co-operation with neighbouring countries. The FCTC now has an additional tool to fight illicit trade – the Protocol to Eliminate Illicit Trade in Tobacco Products, adopted in 2012.

    Expect the tobacco industry to scream loudly against Nigeria’s proposals; however, the country, and the entire continent, needs urgently to put in place these and other FCTC measures to counteract the industry’s increased marketing on the continent. As The Economist recently reported, 17 of the 27 countries in the world where smoking has increased over the past 15 years are in Africa. The costs of the tobacco epidemic are huge, and they will only rise if action is not taken now. For example, by 2030, 80 per cent of tobacco-related deaths will be in low and middle-income countries,

    The negative consequences of tobacco use extend far beyond the health realm. Tobacco use is also a drag on development. It robs families of resources that could be invested in education, health care and even food. Because up to half of all tobacco-related deaths occur during users’ prime productive years (ages 30–69), countries’ economic outputs also suffer. In addition, tobacco growing has a massive impact on the environment. For example, between 1990 and 1995, tobacco farming accounted for 26 per cent of deforestation in Malawi.

    Recognising tobacco’s devastating impact on development, world leaders in 2015 included the FCTC in the Sustainable Development Goals (SDGs), the blueprint for the world’s development between now and 2030. The SDGs call on countries to accelerate implementation of the treaty (Target 3a). Just months before the SDGs were adopted, the Financing for Development conference recommended tobacco taxation as one source of domestic revenue for financing the SDGs. In fact, putting the FCTC’s proven and effective measures in place on the ground is one of the easiest ways that governments can begin living up to their commitments on the SDGs.

    Governments’ adoption of these and other measures, including increasing co-operation to fight tobacco industry interference globally, will help ensure that the FCTC can live up to its potential in fighting the increasingly deadly tobacco epidemic in Africa.

     

    • TihNtiabang,

    Framework Convention Alliance (FCA). & Akinbode Oluwafemi,

    Environmental Rights Action Friends of the Earth, Nigeria.

  • Global experts call for stronger tobacco laws

    Experts from around the world have come together at the World Heart Federation’s World Congress of Cardiology and Cardiovascular Health (WCC 2016) to call for more to be done to fight tobacco industry interference and strengthen tobacco control laws.

    Tobacco is one of the world’s most prolific killers, responsible for six million deaths globally each year, and is the second leading cause of cardiovascular disease (CVD), If current trends continue, by 2030 tobacco will be responsible for more than eight million deaths each year.

     Strengthening tobacco control laws is one of the simplest, most cost-effective ways to save lives and improve the health of populations, but unfortunately the tobacco industry continues to try to block tobacco control legislation using tactics such as encouraging the illicit tobacco trade, attempting to hijack legislation or exploit loopholes, exaggerating the economic importance of the industry and discrediting scientific research.

     At WCC 2016 health experts at the forefront of the fight against tobacco shared practical examples of the challenges they faced and the solutions that are now saving lives, including how they have used WHF’s roadmap on tobacco control. This roadmap, based on the global tobacco control treaty, the Framework Convention on Tobacco Control, indicates clear routes of action for reducing death and disability from heart disease caused by tobacco, and calls upon different groups to coordinate action to accelerate implementation of the treaty. 

     Speaking at Congress, Dr Vera Luiza da Costa e Silva, Head of the Secretariat of the WHO Framework Convention on Tobacco Control, said: “The struggle against the consumption of tobacco only really moves forward when there is a robust response from a wide alliance of professionals willing to offer their time and expertise to counter the tobacco industry’s litany of self-serving untruths.

     “When an eminent physician speaks, most people will listen and consider the message. This is what weighs in the balance against the money and advertising of the tobacco industry. The advocacy of cardiologists and health campaigners is our low-cost response to this powerful enemy, and yet it is invaluable.”

     Also speaking at Congress, Dr Eduardo Bianco, Framework Alliance for Tobacco Control (FCA)’s regional Director for the Americas and co-author of the World Heart Federation’s CVD roadmap explained how Uruguay’s global leadership in implementing the tobacco control treaty helped reduce hospital admissions for heart attacks in the country by 22 percent in two years, while rates increase elsewhere.

     Sharing his personal experience of implementing some of the most stringent tobacco control measures in the world, President Vazquez of Uruguay said: “Tobacco consumption causes 6 million deaths every year and has resulted in cumulative damage to public health for over 60 years. We have approached this battle very seriously in Uruguay and I’m pleased to say, as a direct result, have reduced tobacco consumption among young people from 22.8percent to 8.2 percent less than 10 years.”

     While in Mexico the World Heart Federation will aim to leave a lasting legacy by using its Congress as a platform to support adoption of a national tobacco control law, supporting the #LibredeHumo campaign to make Mexico smoke-free. 

     Dr Salim Yusuf, President of the World Heart Federation said: “The World Heart Federation is committed to reducing premature deaths from non-communicable diseases by 25percent by 2025 and reducing tobacco use by 30% or more is key to saving millions of lives.

     “To enable this we need to persuade political leaders to stand firm in the face of pressure from the tobacco industry.”

  • ‘Six million die of tobacco-related diseases annually’

    ‘Six million die of tobacco-related diseases annually’

    A Senior Programme Officer of Civil Society Legislative Advocacy Centre (CISLAC), a Non-Governmental Organisation, Mr Okeke Anya has said that at least six million people die annually as a result of tobacco-related diseases.

    Speaking at a one-day sensitisation workshop on the National Tobacco

    Control Act held at Tahir Guest Palace in Kano yesterday, Anya said that  by the year 2030, about eight million people are expected to die with the rising spate of tobacco consumption worldwide.

    The African sub-region took the largest chunk of the casualties claimed by tobacco-related death, he said, adding that 80% of the death was caused by excessive consumption of tobacco.

    He said that the tobacco control act was signed into law in 2015 but has yet to be implemented by the authorities concerned, stressing that the task of ensuring its speedy implementation lied with the Federal Ministry of Health. He said: “The Federal Ministry of Health is the one saddled with such a responsibility. The ministry ought to have a special tobacco control unit for effective compliance to be effected.

    “CISLAC is only complementing the effort of the federal government in drawing the attention of tobacco consumers to comprehending the danger and gravity of tobacco smoking. The ramifications of smoking are wide and we have to guard against it.”

    He pointed out that many people in the country were yet to be conversant with the nitty-gritty of the tobacco control act which was yet to become fully operational and affirmed that CISLAC’s major cardinal thrust was for the people to be aware of the danger of smoking and the act prohibiting it.

    He stressed that the only way to discourage the business of tobacco smoking and selling was increase of the tax that every individual must pay to the government but that every state in the country had a stake in ensuring compliance with the control act.

    He disclosed that with constant media spin, the scourge of tobacco smoking would be reduced to the barest minimum and that the punishment to be meted out to those violating the act was enough to keep offenders on their toes.

  • ‘Implement Tobacco Control Act’

    ‘Implement Tobacco Control Act’

    The Environmental Rights Action/Friends of the Earth Nigeria (ERA/FoEN) has urged the Minister of Health, Prof. Isaac Adewole, to expedite action on the implementation of the National Tobacco Control Act signed into law in May 2015 by former President Goodluck Jonathan.

     Deputy Director of ERA/FoEN Akinbode Oluwafemi, who spoke with reporters yesterday in Abuja, said a tobacco corporation, Philip Morris International, was planning a comeback into the Nigerian market.

     Akinbode said the company got the certificate of the Standards Organisation of Nigeria (SON) to import the product into the country.

    He said: “Among others, we demand full probe of the transaction with a view to bringing to justice any government official that compromised in the process of the illegal importation

     “In addition, we are asking for a withdrawal from the market and destruction of the consignment and removal of tobacco products from trade liberalisation policies

     “While we await the next step of the Senate in considering a petition sent to it on the illegal act, we urged the Ministry of Health to expedite action or come up with strong and effective regulations for the implementation of the National Tobacco Control Act.

     “Our position remains unchanged, delay in the implementation of the Act will be exploited by the tobacco industry to begin a new onslaught on our nation and particularly our youths.”