Minister for Health U.T. Khader, City Police Commissioner of Police
Raghavendra H. Auradkar along with health and police officials at a shop
selling tobacco products during an awareness drive in Bangalore on
Saturday.
Loophole in regulations being exploited by companies: health officer
Urban District Health Officer Rajani M. has called for
an amendment to the Food Safety and Standards (Prohibition and
Restrictions on Sales) Regulations, 2011. This in the light of the fact
that though the government has banned the sale of gutka and pan masala
that contain tobacco or nicotine on May 31, companies are subverting the
ban by selling sachets of tobacco separately.
According to her, the gutka industry was exploiting a loophole in the law and selling tobacco leaves separately.
Explaining
the loophole, she said that the Food Safety and Standards (Prohibition
and Restriction on Sales) Regulations, 2011, prohibits the sale of food
items containing tobacco and nicotine. “But loose tobacco is being sold
to people who are later mixing them with other products. Since the law
prohibits the sale of gutka with other food items, the industry lobby is
contending that loose tobacco can be sold. There is a need to amend the
regulations so that tobacco is not sold in separate sachets,” she said
here on Saturday during the drive to weed out illegal advertisements
pertaining to tobacco products.
Health Minister U.T.
Khader, City Police Commissioner Raghavendra Auradkar and Additional
Police Commissioner Kamal Panth inspected four tea shops on Infantry
Road and its surroundings as a part of the drive to get illegal
advertisements removed from shops selling cigarettes and pan masala. Mr.
Khader directed the shopkeepers to display pictorial warnings of the
consequences of consuming tobacco and its products.
Section
5 of the Cigarette and Other Tobacco Products Act (COTPA) places
restrictions on the advertisement of cigarettes or any other tobacco
product and also makes it mandatory for a health warning to be placed in
each of the stalls.
“Several youngsters consume
tobacco that has dangerous health hazards. There is a need for vendors
to place boards that convey the message that consuming tobacco is
harmful to health so that youngsters will at least think twice before
falling prey to it.”
At one of the stalls on
Cunnigham Road, a vendor was selling Super Zerda, a tobacco product and
there was no clear pictorial statutory warning on the sachets and the
Minister directed officials to initiate action against the company.
And,
the Health Minister collected six pan masala sachets and directed the
officials to get them checked in laboratories to find whether they
contained tobacco.
To a query, Mr. Khader said, “After the ban, sale of gutka has reduced significantly.”
He added that similar drives against the sale of tobacco products would be carried out in all districts.
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