By Tricitynews
Chandigarh 04th
September:- In wake of Haryana
and Punjab becoming major centres for manufacture, trade and consumption of
illicit cigarettes, experts have called for immediate tightening of regulations
and administrative crackdown including strict enforcements.
At a media workshop
on Wednesday, experts also warned of an impending crisis with implications for
health and government revenues in wake of unfettered growth in manufacture and
sales of illicit cigarettes in Punjab & Haryana. RK Tiwari of Centre for
Public Awareness, said that due to low surveillance and lack of regulations,
manufacturers are using the states as dumping ground of illicit cigarettes. In
addition to illegally manufactured cigarettes, counterfeit cigarettes are also
being smuggled from China and elsewhere. Brands like Win, Black, ESSE, Mond,
Pine etc do not carry mandatory 85% pictorial warnings, thereby giving a
gullible consumer an impression that these are safer cigarettes.
According to the
World Health Organization (WHO), 1 in every 10 cigarettes and tobacco products
consumed globally is illicit, however India the situation is very grave, 1 in 4
cigarettes is illegal. In addition to posing serious health challenges for
youth, trade in illicit cigarettes is also a potential source of terror
funding. “The illicit market is supported by various players ranging from petty
peddlers to organized criminal networks involved in arms and human trafficking”
according to WHO.
According to
Euromonitor International, Illegal Cigarette trade currently accounts for as
much as 1/4th of the cigarette Industry in India with more than 25 billion
sticks of Illegal cigarettes consumed in 2017. He added that the trade in
illicit cigarettes causes an estimated loss of over Rs 13,000 crore in tax
evasions to the government.
Cigarette licenses
are regulated by the Industries Development & Regulation Act of 1951. Post
the 1991 de-licensing, only five industries are under compulsory licensing
including cigars and cigarettes of tobacco and manufactured tobacco
substitutes. No new licenses have been granted for manufacture of these items
since 1999. Yet illicit manufacturing of cigarettes continues using a flaw in
the Act.
Pampa Mukherjee,
professor at Panjab University, Chandigarh shared that the definition of
‘factory’ under the Act does not make any exceptions on products. It says that
units employing less than 50 workers with the aid of power, or 100 workers
without the aid of power, can set up a factory without obtaining a compulsory
license, and that is where the problem lies.
R K Tiwari further
shared that flaunting this loophole, many factories have come up in Punjab
manufacturing and clearing cigarettes clandestinely.
Dr Rakesh Khullar of
BGJ Institute of Health, Panjab University, Chandigarh said that illegal
cigarettes come mixed with hazardous substances including imported intoxicants
from China and they are extremely harmful. Experts point out that such illegal
cigarettes have five times as much cadmium, nearly six times as much lead and
high levels of arsenic. They also contain 160% more tar, 80% more nicotine and
133 percent more carbon monoxide.
A research by the Department of Sciences at
John Jay College of Criminal Justice in New York shows that such cigarettes in
fact have higher levels of toxic chemicals including tar, nicotine, carbon
monoxide, lead, arsenic, and toxic metal cadmium.
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