Tag: Tobacco

  • AP CM requests Centre to allow sale of excess FCV Tobacco without penalties

    AP CM requests Centre to allow sale of excess FCV Tobacco without penalties

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    Hyderabad: Andhra Pradesh chief minister YS Jagan Mohan Reddy on Friday wrote to the Union Minister for Commerce and Industry, Piyush Goyal requesting to allow the sale of excess Flue Cure Virginia (FCV) tobacco produced in the state without any penalty for 2022 to 2023 crop season.

    Jagan requested the Central government to issue necessary orders to the Tobacco Board, Guntur to allow the sale of excess FCV tobacco produced by the registered growers of the state without any penalty in SBS, SLS and NLS regions.

    FCV tobacco Crop is grown under Southern Light Soils (SLS) and Southern Black Soils (SBS) regions in Prakasam, SPSR Nellore, Bapatla, Palnadu, Guntur and Northern Light Soils (NLS) West and East Godavari districts in the state.

    MS Education Academy

    He said that the crop was severely affected due to the Mandous cyclonic heavy rains and out of 53,000 hectares more than 50 per cent of the area was severely damaged.

    The cyclone caused the tobacco growers to incur additional costs on the production of the crop during this year, as there is no alternate crop for the region the farmers were forced to go for replanting.

    “As the FCV tobacco Farmers have already incurred heavy losses due to the mandous cyclone and also spent huge amounts for replanting and irrigating the crop, they are not in a position to pay the penalties to the Tobacco Board on excess tobacco produced beyond the authorised quantity,” said Jagan.

    He mentioned that similar measures were taken by the Centre to allow the sale of excess FCV tobacco produced by the registered growers as well as the unauthorized FCV tobacco produced by the unregistered growers in Karnataka without any penalty during the 2022 to 2023 crop season.

    The chief minister requested for the measures to be extended to provide to the AP farmers who suffered losses due to the cyclone.

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    #requests #Centre #sale #excess #FCV #Tobacco #penalties

    ( With inputs from www.siasat.com )

  • British American Tobacco to pay $635m over North Korea sanctions breaches

    British American Tobacco to pay $635m over North Korea sanctions breaches

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    British American Tobacco (BAT) has agreed to pay more than $635m (£511m) to US authorities after a subsidiary pleaded guilty to charges that it conspired to violate US sanctions by selling tobacco products to North Korea and commit bank fraud.

    The tobacco sales at the heart of Tuesday’s settlement took place from 2007 to 2017 to the isolated Communist nation, according to both the company and the Justice Department. North Korea faces an array of US sanctions to choke off funding for its nuclear and ballistic missile program.

    “This case and others like it do serve as a warning shot to companies,” Matthew Olsen, assistant attorney general of the Justice department’s National Security Division, told a news conference.

    The case represents the “single largest North Korea sanctions penalty” in Justice department history, he said.

    BAT, the world’s second-biggest tobacco group, makes Lucky Strike and Dunhill cigarettes.

    Its annual report for 2019 said the group has operations in a number of nations that are subject to various sanctions, including Iran and Cuba, and that operations in these countries expose the company to the risk of “significant financial costs.”

    In a statement, BAT said it has entered into a deferred prosecution agreement with the Justice department, while one of its indirect subsidiaries in Singapore – BAT Marketing Singapore – pleaded guilty.

    It also separately entered a civil settlement with the US Treasury department’s Office of Foreign Assets Control.

    The $635.2m payment to US authorities is the total to cover the three cases, the company said.

    “We deeply regret the misconduct arising from historical business activities that led to these settlements, and acknowledge that we fell short of the highest standards rightly expected of us,” the company’s CEO Jack Bowles said in a statement.

    In a court filing, the Justice Department said the company also conspired to defraud financial institutions in order to get them to process transactions on behalf of North Korean entities.

    North Korean leader Kim Jong-un is known as a chain smoker – frequently seen with a cigarette in hand in photographs in state media. A US-push for the UN security council to ban exports to North Korea of tobacco and manufactured tobacco was vetoed by Russia and China in May last year.

    In addition to the settlement with British American Tobacco, the Justice Department on Tuesday also disclosed criminal charges against North Korean banker Sim Hyon-Sop, 39, and Chinese facilitators Qin Guoming, 60, and Han Linlin, 41, as part of a “multi-year scheme to facilitate the sale of tobacco to North Korea.”

    From 2009 through 2019, the Justice department said they bought leaf tobacco for North Korean state-owned cigarette manufacturers and falsified documents to trick US banks into processing at least 310 transactions worth $74m that would have otherwise been blocked due to sanctions.

    The government said North Korean manufacturers, including one owned by the North Korean military, were able to reap about $700m in revenue thanks to those illicit transactions.

    The three defendants remain at large. The state department is offering rewards for information leading to their capture.

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    #British #American #Tobacco #pay #635m #North #Korea #sanctions #breaches
    ( With inputs from : www.theguardian.com )

  • 1200 Kashmiris Triumph Over Tobacco In Last Four Years

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    SRINAGAR: About 1200 persons quit smoking in Kashmir in the last four years, official data said. As per the data accessed by the news agency KNO, 147 persons quit smoking in 2022-23 in Kashmir, 642 in 2021-22, 212 in 2020-21, and 194 in 2019-20.

    The Data said that around 6624 persons received counseling but no pharmacotherapy in 2022-23, 7815 in 2021-22, 5348 in 2020-21, and 791 in 2019-20.

    It also said 2109 persons received counseling and pharmacotherapy in 2022-23, 5412 in 2021-22, 4231 in 2020-21, and 2267 in 2019-20.

    Officials claim that a slew of measures have been taken to decrease the percentage of tobacco consumption in the UT even as they claim that the percentage has started going down due to the efforts of the National Tobacco Control Programme launched by the Government.

    Notably as per GATS 2 Data 35.2% of Men & 5.1% of women & 20.8% of all Adults currently smoke Tobacco in J&K

    6.8% of Men & 1.5% of women and 4.3% of all adults currently use smokeless Tobacco, 39.7% of Men & 6.2 % of women & 23.7% of all adults either smoke tobacco or use smokeless Tobacco.

    The National Health and Family Survey-5 (NHFS-5) data reveals nearly one-third (32%) of men, but only 1 percent of women, aged 15-49 use some form of tobacco.

    “Tobacco products mostly used by men are cigarettes (27%), bidis (4%), hookah, and cigars or pipe (2% each). Among women and men, the use of any form of tobacco is slightly higher in rural areas (1.4% for women and 35% for men) than in urban areas (0.7% for women and 24% for men),” the data adds—(KNO)

     

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    #Kashmiris #Triumph #Tobacco #Years

    ( With inputs from : kashmirlife.net )

  • 21% Adults In JK Use Tobacco: Survey

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    SRINAGAR: Around 21 percent adults in Jammu and Kashmir are using tobacco even as authorities have taken slew of measures to decrease the percentage of tobacco consumption in JK

    As per Global Adult Tobacco Survey (GATS- 2) data it has come to fore 35.2 percent men and 5.1 percent women and 20.8 percent of all adults currently smoke Tobacco in JK.

    As per data, 6.8 percent  men , 1.5 percent women  and 4.3 percent of all adults currently use smokeless tobacco,  while 39.7 percent men and  6.2 percent  women and  23.7 percent of all adults either smoke tobacco or use smokeless Tobacco.

    The National Health and Family Survey-5 (NHFS-5) data reveals nearly one-third (32%) of men, but only 1 percent of women, age 15-49 use some form of tobacco.

    “Tobacco products mostly used by men are cigarettes (27%), bidis (4%), hookah and cigars or pipe (2% each). Among women and men, the use of any form of tobacco is slightly higher in rural areas (1.4% for women and 35% for men) than in urban areas (0.7% for women and 24% for men),” the data adds.

    Meanwhile, top health officials said that slew of measures have been taken to decrease the percentage of tobacco consumption in the UT even as they claim the percentage has started going down due to the efforts of the National Tobacco Control Programme launched by the Government.

    We have taken steps to reach out to the people and make them aware about the hazardous effects on their health, they said, adding that the overall consumption of tobacco and cigarette smoking has declined.

    Dr Mir Mushtaq, spokesperson Directorate of Health Services Kashmir said that during the year 2022-23, at least 6624 tobacco users received counselling besides that 2109 users received counselling and pharmacotherapy while 147 persons quit tobacco use.

    He said that in the last four years thousands of tobacco users were counselled and hundreds have quitted tobacco use.

    He said that in the year 2022-23 around 8000 challans were produced and around Rs 3 lakh were collected from them.

    He further said that various awareness programmes have been already started to educate people about the hazards of tobacco chewing and smoking besides that officials have been directed to conduct regular enforcement drives for implementation of COTPA-2003.

    Notably, the government of Jammu and Kashmir has also imposed a complete ban on the sale of loose cigarettes, loose beedis and loose tobacco while all educational institutions and tourist destinations were declared as tobacco free zones.

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    #Adults #Tobacco #Survey

    ( With inputs from : kashmirlife.net )

  • Around 21 percent adults use tobacco in J&K

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    Jahangeer Ganaie

    Srinagar, Mar 04: Around 21 percent adults in Jammu and Kashmir are using that tobacco even as authorities have taken slew of measures to decrease the percentage of tobacco consumption in J&K.

    As per GATS 2 Data 35.2% Men & 5.1% women & 20.8% of all Adults currently smoke Tobacco in J&K

    As per data available with the news agency—Kashmir News Observer (KNO), 6.8% Men & 1.5% women & 4.3% of all Adults currently use smokeless Tobacco, 39.7% Men & 6.2 % women & 23.7% of all adults either smoke tobacco or use smokeless Tobacco.

    The National Health and Family Survey-5 (NHFS-5) data reveals nearly one-third (32%) of men, but only 1 percent of women, age 15-49 use some form of tobacco.

    “Tobacco products mostly used by men are cigarettes (27%), bidis (4%), hookah and cigars or pipe (2% each). Among women and men, the use of any form of tobacco is slightly higher in rural areas (1.4% for women and 35% for men) than in urban areas (0.7% for women and 24% for men),” the data adds.

    Meanwhile, top health officials said that slew of measures have been taken to decrease the percentage of tobacco consumption in the UT even as they claim that percentage has started going down due to the efforts of the National Tobacco Control Programme launched by the Government.

    We have taken steps to reach out to the people and make them aware about the hazardous effects on their health, they said, adding that the overall consumption of tobacco and cigarette smoking has declined.

    Dr Mir Mushtaq, spokesperson Directorate of Health Services Kashmir told KNO that during the year 2022-23, at least 6624 tobacco users received counselling besides that 2109 users received counselling and pharmacotherapy while 147 persons quit tobacco use.

    He said that in the last four thousands of tobacco users were counselled and hundreds have quitted tobacco use.

    He said that in the year 2022-23 around 8000 challans were produced and around Rs 3 lakh were collected from them.

    He said that various awareness programmes have been already started to educate people about the hazards of tobacco chewing and smoking besides that officials have been directed to conduct regular enforcement drives for implementation of COTPA-2003.

    Notably ,the government of Jammu and Kashmir has also imposed a complete ban on the sale of loose cigarettes, loose beedis and loose tobacco while all educational institutions and tourist destinations were declared as tobacco free zones.

    Pertinently tobacco is said to be the leading cause of preventable deaths in the world. It kills approximately more than seven million globally and more than one million in India.

    Notably lung cancer has been found to be the second commonest cancer. In the past few decades, the cancer catastrophe has created havoc globally, Kashmir has witnessed rise in cases of lung and breast cancers.

    As per the hospital-based data from Kashmir valley males have higher incidence of lung cancer while females fall victim of breast cancers.

    There is a direct relation between length of smoking and number of cigarettes smoked per day. Even if smokers quit smoking there are chances of developing cancer but these chances decrease to a greater extent, officials said—(KNO)

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    ( With inputs from : roshankashmir.net )

  • María Fernández: “The enemies in cancer prevention are misinformation and tobacco marketing”

    María Fernández: “The enemies in cancer prevention are misinformation and tobacco marketing”

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    Scientific findings take time to land on the street. About 17 years old, the researchers calculate. And when the evidence does come into practice, it does not always penetrate satisfactorily. “The impact of an intervention depends on the effectiveness of the intervention and the reach of the population,” explains María Fernández, director of the Center for Health Prevention at the University of Texas School of Public Health, during a scientific seminar organized by the Catalan Institute of Oncology, in Barcelona. The researcher (Washington DC, 56 years old), an expert in the development and evaluation of health promotion interventions, spoke to EL PAÍS after recounting, in front of a room full of young researchers, the challenges of implementing science in prevention of cancer.

    Ask. In his conference, he talked about the gap between what they know and what it costs to put it into practice. Regarding cancer, what example is there of something that you know works, but it hasn’t made it to the street?

    Answer. In the United States, for example, we know that the use of physician reminders works to increase colorectal cancer screening, but it is not being used in clinics and many physicians may not remember. And patient reminders work too. We also know that there are interventions that increase children’s physical activity, such as active learning, in which those interventions teach teachers to teach while moving the children around. Another example is that we know that if the doctor recommends the papilloma vaccine while he is recommending the other vaccines, it works better than giving a separate recommendation.

    Q. In his conference, he also mentioned fear as a factor that can play a double role: it can be used to get citizens to participate in some strategies, such as screening, but if you go too far, they can reject these measures. How is balance achieved?

    R. With this example I was hitting the key point that it is very important to work with expert patients because people identify with other patients. But it is also important to work with people who know about health psychology because there are different things that influence whether or not a person listens to a message and whether or not the message motivates them. One way to handle it is to be realistic with the risk there is, but give hints about what they can do: never just give a message of fear.

    Q. Is the population being scared too much with cancer?

    R. I don’t know… I think it’s important that people know they’re at risk, but that they know there are things they can do. A person is not going to make an effort to do something if they think that “it will not happen to me” or that “if it happens to me, there is nothing I can do, I cannot survive”.

    Q. What barriers are there to improve prevention?

    R. In cancer, there are several things that can reduce your risk and others that you can do to detect it early. People perhaps do not pay attention to the recommendations or do not believe them and think that it does not matter what they do because it will not happen to them or it will happen to them anyway: that determinism, that fatalism, can be a barrier. But the most important thing, without a doubt, is tobacco: if a person does not smoke, eats well, and takes the tests that are due, it is the best way to prevent cancer.

    Q. It has long been known that smoking is very bad for health and causes cancer. Why hasn’t tobacco been removed from the equation?

    R. One of the problems is that there are programs that work, but they are not integrated as much as possible and that means that people do not have access to them. The programs have to be powerful, they have to work; it is not worth giving pamphlets. In the United States we have a telephone line to help people quit smoking: they give advice and access to medicines.

    In lifestyles it is something in which we are failing: people eat worse and worse, exercise less and continue to smoke”

    Q. Precisely in tobacco consumption there is a gradient of social inequality: people with fewer resources smoke more. How much does social inequality weigh in the fight against cancer?

    R. It weighs a lot. In Spain you have it much better in terms of access, there are not as many inequalities as in the United States, but they still exist. Sometimes it is inequality in the sense that educated people understand more about the risks or where they have to go to access it. [al sistema]; this, for a migrant or person with less education or resources, is very difficult. And then the day-to-day influences: if a person is thinking about how to pay for food this week, it is much more difficult, because of that day-to-day struggle, for them to say: ‘I’m going to take care of myself, I’m going to the doctor or I’m going to to participate in this community program’.

    Q. It is more difficult for them to worry about their health.

    R. Clear. But what frustrates me, sometimes, when we talk about inequality, is that the controversy always goes to the person, to what they care about or to their motivation. And this seems super unfair to me. It is not that the person does not care about their health, it is that what they have to solve that day is more urgent.

    Q. Regarding tobacco and other risk factors, the scientific community says that around 40% of tumors could be prevented. What is wrong with citizenship?

    R. In lifestyles it is something in which we are failing: people eat worse and worse, exercise less and continue to smoke. But there are also screenings that can prevent cancer and we have to use them. Accessibility and motivation must be increased.

    Q. How is he motivated?

    R. This depends on what are the reasons or determinants of that behavior. And there are different. Some may not feel susceptible; others may think that the tests are not effective or that they do not want to know if they have cancer… The knowledge and beliefs in each population must be understood to focus education on the barriers they have.

    Q. About the importance of the information that is given, how much do the fake news to prevention strategies?

    R. It affects us a lot. She went through a lot with the covid. In the United States they say ridiculous things, like that vaccines are made with aborted fetuses or that vaccines cause autism. The fake news they create fear and a certain fear of vaccines and that is very worrying: the vaccine against the papilloma virus, for example, is incredible technology and that we have a vaccine that prevents cancer is something we dreamed of. But that people don’t like it because they say it’s very new, worries us.

    Q. What is the great enemy for you, who are dedicated to cancer prevention? What is the most difficult for you to fight?

    R. The enemies in this are misinformation and marketing of the tobacco industry. It is very difficult to combat this and public health does not have the resources to do so.

    The ‘fake news’ creates fear and a certain fear of vaccines and that worries a lot”

    Q. Does the tobacco industry put a lot of pressure on you?

    R. Yes, but I think it is much worse in other countries than in the United States because in the United States there are more rules: you cannot have signs, for example, near schools, although this is different in each state.

    Q. Even if it is more regulated, how far does its power reach?

    R. They still have quite a bit of power. What the tobacco companies have done is diversify and sometimes you don’t know who you’re dealing with. I think they still have a lot of influence and although certain things are regulated, the marketing is strong. What seems worst to me is the approach [que están haciendo] in developing countries, which have fewer resources, to get people hooked and also expanding the types of products they use.

    You can follow THE COUNTRY Health and Well-being in Facebook, Twitter and instagram.

    #María #Fernández #enemies #cancer #prevention #misinformation #tobacco #marketing



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    ( With inputs from : pledgetimes.com )

  • Choose Life, Not Tobacco: Coordination Committee meeting held at Shopian

    Choose Life, Not Tobacco: Coordination Committee meeting held at Shopian

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    SHOPIAN, FEBRUARY 14: The Additional Deputy Commissioner, (ADC) Shopian, Yar Ali Khan today chaired a district level Coordination Committee meeting at Mini Secretariat, here to review the action taken till date towards the furtherance of Tobacco free society and to discuss and approve the future plan of action against the implementation of COTPA Act, 2003.

    At the outset, CMO Shopian, Dr Arshid presented an overview of the National Tobacco Control Programme (NTCP), while an expert from DHSK presented discussion on the agenda points.

    On the occasion, directions were given for making all government institutions/ private premises ‘Tobacco Free Zones’ and all educational institutions as ‘Tobacco Free Educational institutions ‘ as per the guidelines.

    ADC also directed for displaying mandatory prominent signages across the district, at public places, institutions, etc denouncing use of Tobacco products. Directions were also passed to all stakeholders for taking strict action against retailers promoting Tobacco use through surrogate advertising.

    Emphasis was given on conducting intensive IEC activities across the district for dissemination of information on the adverse impacts of tobacco use. Capacity building of stakeholders was asked to be stressed for implementation along with increasing challans against the violations of the Act.

    Besides, feasibility of vendor licensing was also discussed in the meeting.

    ASP, Ifroz Ahmad; CMO, Dr.Arshid; CEO Mohd Mushtaq; DIO, STO, EO MC, ADP and other concerned attended the meeting besides a team of specialists from DHSK.

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    #Choose #Life #Tobacco #Coordination #Committee #meeting #held #Shopian

    ( With inputs from : roshankashmir.net )