Sat, Mar 20 2010

New smoking bans in force in Cyprus, Macedonia

Tue, Jan 05 2010 12:54 CET 1468 Views 5 Comments
New smoking bans in force in Cyprus, Macedonia

Cyprus and Macedonia have become, with effect from January 1 2010, the two latest European countries to toughen up their smoking bans.
 
In Cyprus, the new restrictions ban smoking in public places including hospitals, schools, theatres, public transport including taxis and in private cars with passengers younger than 16. Also banned is advertising of tobacco products and the sale of such products to people younger than 16.
 
Breaking the ban means fines of 2000 euro for smokers and owners of places where smoking takes place in violation of the law.
 
The new rules expand on earlier restrictions which, reports said, had been widely flouted.
 
Macedonian media said that the first few days of the ban, which outlaws smoking in all enclosed public spaces and workplaces, had seen widespread compliance. Fines for breaking the ban are 150 to 300 euro for individuals and up to 4500 euro for legal persons.
 
The year 2009 saw several countries impose or extend bans, including Greece and Turkey. The exception was Croatia, which in September 2009 trimmed back a ban imposed earlier that year.
 
Spain reportedly plans a total ban on smoking in bars, restaurants and other places of entertainment in 2010, and Bulgaria is also set to ban smoking in public places in 2010, although a 2005 law restricting smoking in public places is extensively ignored.
 
Elsewhere in Europe, Scotland reportedly is planning to top up existing anti-smoking laws with a ban on cigarette vending machines and on the display of tobacco products in shops.
 
Most European Union member states impose smoking bans in some form, and on the continent as a whole there are variations, including Montenegro’s ban which includes outlawing people on television being depicted smoking.
 
In Ankara, daily Hurriyet, quoted by Bulgarian news agency Focus, said that cigarette prices had gone up because of hiked excises on tobacco.
 
Philip Morris and British American Tobacco (BAT) had significantly increased the prices of the cigarettes they produced, the newspaper said.
 
From January 4, cigarettes produced by Philip Morris in Turkey cost 15 per cent more, while a packet of Kent, produced by BAT, now costs seven Turkish lira, about 3.38 euro.
 
 
 

Comments

Anonymous chas Thu, Jan 07 2010 16:32 CET
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Thousands of pubs and clubs have closed and about 100,000 staff have been made unemployed since the ban in the UK. My advice to publicans in Cyprus and Macedonia is to get out now, before you go bankrupt.

Anonymous cigarette Wed, Jan 06 2010 18:43 CET
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if theres a smoking problem in cyprus then you can blame the Turks because they are the kings of smoking cigarret cigar marijuna drugs

Anonymous Smokin' Tue, Jan 05 2010 20:48 CET
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Harleyrider , Do you by any chance have shares in or work for a tobacco company? You have obviously convinced yourself.

Anonymous harleyrider Tue, Jan 05 2010 15:52 CET
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Since 1981 there have been 148 reported studies on ETS, involving spouses, children and workplace exposure. 124 of these studies showed no significant causal relationship between second hand smoke and lung cancer. Of the 24 which showed some risk, only two had a Relative Risk Factor over 3.0 and none higher. What does this mean. To put it in perspective, Robert Temple, director of drug evaluation at the Food and Drug Administration said "My basic rule is if the relative risk isn't at least 3 or 4, forget it." The National Cancer Institute states "Relative risks of less than 2 are considered small and are usually difficult to interpret. Such increases may be due to mere chance, statistical bias, or the effect of confounding factors that are sometimes not evident." Dr. Kabat, IAQC epidemiologist states "An association is generally considered weak if the relative risk is under 3.0 and particularly when it is under 2.0, as is the case in the relationship of ETS and lung cancer. Therefore, you can see any concern of second hand smoke causing lung cancer is highly questionable." Note that the Relative Risk (RR) of lung cancer for persons drinking whole milk is 2.14 and all cancers from chlorinated water ranked at 1.25. These are higher risks than the average ETS risk. If we believe second hand smoke to be a danger for lung cancer then we should also never drink milk or chlorinated water.

Anonymous HARLEYRIDER Tue, Jan 05 2010 15:51 CET
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THE AIR ACCORDING TO OSHA

Though repetition has little to do with "the truth," we're repeatedly told that there's "no safe level of exposure to secondhand smoke."

OSHA begs to differ.

OSHA has established PELs (Permissible Exposure Levels) for all the measurable chemicals, including the 40 alleged carcinogens, in secondhand smoke. PELs are levels of exposure for an 8-hour workday from which, according to OSHA, no harm will result.

Of course the idea of "thousands of chemicals" can itself sound spooky. Perhaps it would help to note that coffee contains over 1000 chemicals, 19 of which are known to be rat carcinogens.
-"Rodent Carcinogens: Setting Priorities" Gold Et Al., Science, 258: 261-65 (1992)

There. Feel better?

As for secondhand smoke in the air, OSHA has stated outright that:

"Field studies of environmental tobacco smoke indicate that under normal conditions, the components in tobacco smoke are diluted below existing Permissible Exposure Levels (PELS.) as referenced in the Air Contaminant Standard (29 CFR 1910.1000)...It would be very rare to find a workplace with so much smoking that any individual PEL would be exceeded."
-Letter From Greg Watchman, Acting Sec'y, OSHA, To Leroy J Pletten, PHD, July 8, 1997

Indeed it would.

Independent health researchers have done the chemistry and the math to prove how very very rare that would be.

As you're about to see in a moment.

In 1999, comments were solicited by the government from an independent Public and Health Policy Research group, Littlewood & Fennel of Austin, Tx, on the subject of secondhand smoke.

Using EPA figures on the emissions per cigarette of everything measurable in secondhand smoke, they compared them to OSHA's PELs.

The following excerpt and chart are directly from their report and their Washington testimony:

CALCULATING THE NON-EXISTENT RISKS OF ETS

"We have taken the substances for which measurements have actually been obtained--very few, of course, because it's difficult to even find these chemicals in diffuse and diluted ETS.

"We posit a sealed, unventilated enclosure that is 20 feet square with a 9 foot ceiling clearance.

"Taking the figures for ETS yields per cigarette directly from the EPA, we calculated the number of cigarettes that would be required to reach the lowest published "danger" threshold for each of these substances. The results are actually quite amusing. In fact, it is difficult to imagine a situation where these threshold limits could be realized.

"Our chart (Table 1) illustrates each of these substances, but let me report some notable examples.

"For Benzo[a]pyrene, 222,000 cigarettes would be required to reach the lowest published "danger" threshold.

"For Acetone, 118,000 cigarettes would be required.

"Toluene would require 50,000 packs of simultaneously smoldering cigarettes.

"At the lower end of the scale-- in the case of Acetaldehyde or Hydrazine, more than 14,000 smokers would need to light up simultaneously in our little room to reach the threshold at which they might begin to pose a danger.

"For Hydroquinone, "only" 1250 cigarettes are required. Perhaps we could post a notice limiting this 20-foot square room to 300 rather tightly-packed people smoking no more than 62 packs per hour?

"Of course the moment we introduce real world factors to the room -- a door, an open window or two, or a healthy level of mechanical air exchange (remember, the room we've been talking about is sealed) achieving these levels becomes even more implausible.

"It becomes increasingly clear to us that ETS is a political, rather than scientific, scapegoat."

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