Archive for the ‘The new tobacco’ Category

IS Egypt secular, Muslim or a muddled mix?

Monday, September 21st, 2009

The holy month of Ramadan has brought out Egypt’s cultural split personality, twisting Egyptians into knots over whether their society is secular, Muslim or a muddled mix.

Two furious debates have been raging through the season in the Arab world’s most populous nation. On one hand, rumors that police arrested Egyptians violating the daily Ramadan fast raised dire warnings from secularists that a Taliban-like rule by Islamic law is taking over.

On the other, Ramadan TV talk shows on state-sponsored television featuring racily dressed female hosts discussing intimate sex secrets with celebrities have sparked outrage from conservatives, denouncing what they call the decadence that is sweeping the nation.

So is Egypt being taken over by sinners or saints? Egyptians have always been a boisterous combination – priding themselves on their piety, while determined to have a good time.

Ramadan, the final day of which is Saturday in most of the Islamic world, shows the contradictions. Egyptians widely adhere to the dawn-to-dusk fast, in which the faithful abstain from food, drink, smoking and sex from dawn until dusk. After sunset, while some pray into the night, many Egyptians party with large meals and a heavy dose of TV entertainment produced specially for the month.

But the confusion comes from the government as well. It has often promoted strict Islamic principles in an attempt to co-opt conservatives and undercut extremists whom the state has been battling for decades. But it also increasingly dominated by businessmen who this year are more heavily than ever promoting Western-style secular culture.

There is no explicit law in Egypt to punish those not abiding by the fast, nor are there religious police to enforce Islamic rules as in Saudi Arabia. Many restaurants still serve during the day, and coffee shops can be seen with their doors cracked open, patrons hidden inside sipping tea or smoking water pipes.

But independent newspapers reported this month that police arrested more than 150 people for openly violating the fast.

Most of the reports have been unconfirmed. But Ahmed, a 27-year old fruit vendor, told The Associated Press he and 15 other people were arrested in a market in the southern town of Aswan on Sept. 5, for smoking in public.

“I was slapped, kicked around,” Ahmed said, refusing to give his last name fearing further police harassment. “They asked me why I am not fasting … They insulted me and used foul language.”

Ahmed said he was kept in the police station for nearly six hours, then let go. “Now I am fasting, I swear,” he said.

Police officials refused to confirm if Ahmed and others were arrested for not fasting, saying only they were rounded up for investigation.

The reports sparked criticism from Egyptian human rights activists, who called the crackdown unconstitutional. Activists said it appeared some police were acting individually to enforce the fast, a sign of increasing conservatism in the Interior Ministry. Some critics argued that adherence to the fast is traditionally a matter between each individual Muslim and God.

The Interior Ministry didn’t deny or confirm the reports, but a ministry spokesman was quoted in the press last week insisting the security forces have a right to crack down on violators of the fast.

Bilal Fadl, a popular satirical columnist, said the ministry is mimicking “big sister Saudi Arabia,” adding, “can we be so demanding from the sheiks in the Interior Ministry and ask them to postpone their campaign to defend (Islam) … and start with implementing religious laws that fight corruption?”

An Egyptian blogger who goes by the pseudonym “Kalb Baladi” (Stray Dog) warned, “once we start going down the slippery slope of religious fascism, Egypt will become another Afghanistan in no time.”

But the campaign appeared to have backers among the public. One woman who called into a popular talk show, Al-Qahira Al-Yom (Cairo Today), said fast-breakers were “looking for trouble” and should be jailed.

Television talk shows and soap operas produced especially for Ramadan have sparked their own debates.

State television and private channels owned by businessmen close to the government flooded the airwaves with new programs that liberally discussed taboo subjects like extramarital relationships, polygamy, divorce and sex education. Most featured stylish female hosts and often veered into titillation.

Ramadan is supposed to be a time of piety and religious reflection. Open talk of sex on TV is frowned upon throughout the year – but it’s outright shocking during the holy month, when Muslims believe Islam’s holy book the Quran was first revealed to the Prophet Muhammad.

Gehad Auda, a political analyst and member of the ruling party, said the government was intentionally trying to challenge religious extremists by opening the doors to more daring topics on TV.

“There is a new television logic, not only with images, but also through dialogue, without fear by breaking taboos surrounding many issues” to raise social awareness, Auda said.

In one espoused of a talk show called “The Daring One,” the host – a famous female film director with a penchant for short skirts – kept pressing her actress guest about what she and her boyfriend liked to do when they’re alone.

On the same show, another actress confessed she once had an abortion – which is illegal in Egypt and strictly forbidden by Islamic law. A male guest admitted to extramarital affairs.

The barrage of provocative shows has unleashed heavy criticism.

“We should boycott all this absurdity and obscenity and read the Quran,” Mahmoud Ashour, an official with al-Azhar, the highest institution of Sunni learning in the Muslim world, told a gathering.

Columnist Ahmed Gamal Badawi wrote in the liberal opposition daily Al-Wafd that the government policy to “besiege” Islamists with “obscenity” would backfire and only add “millions to their ranks.”

Wael Abdel Fattah, a producer of one of the new talk shows but also a government critic, said the conflicting messages of arresting fast-breakers while challenging religious sensitivities just show the state’s determination to impose its power on all sides.

The state “is now dressing up in fashion, wearing a suit and tie, talking elegantly, showing pretty pictures but it is still very much in control … it all fits the traditional tools of oppression,” he said.


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Tobacco products to get new pictorial warnings

Thursday, September 17th, 2009

The health ministry is developing a new set of pictorial warnings for tobacco products to be put in place from next year. This move came after the ministry was flooded with complaints that the current warnings were ineffective.

Tobacco manufacturers print the pictorial warning in such a way that they don’t cover 40 per cent area of the pack as mandated in the tobacco control law.

The content of the warning is also not visible in most cases and a few products don’t print the warnings at all, said B. K. Prasad, health ministry official incharge of tobacco control measures.

All these are serious violations of the law and concerned government agencies have been told to take action.

” We received a lot of complaints about the way warnings are being printed on tobacco packs and we have taken a serious view of it,” said Prasad, while talking on the sidelines of a the World Health Organization ( WHO) conference on the Framework Convention on Tobacco Control.

A WHO official said warnings on cigarette packets hardly depict a pair of lungs diseased by tobacco smoke. ” It looks more like an image of a person wearing an oversized tie, minus the head,” he said.

In the case of chewing tobacco packs – which carry the picture of a scorpion – the makers are misleading people by informally projecting it as a government ” seal of quality”. Besides pictorial warnings on tobacco products and ban on smoking in public places – which are measures to cut the demand of tobacco products – the government also initiated steps to address the supply side as well, Prasad said.

Programmes have been launched to wean tobacco farmers away from growing tobacco and to offer alternative livelihood to people engaged in bidi rolling.

At present, nearly five million people are engaged in the bidi industry.

“The tobacco lobby has used tobacco farmers and bidi workers – to stall many steps to curb the menace in the country,” minister of state for health Dinesh Trivedi at the conference.

“Overcoming pressure from this lobby is a big challenge for tobacco control in India.”


Courtesy: Mail Today

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More to do in tobacco drive

Tuesday, September 15th, 2009

Bhubaneswar, Pictorial health warnings on tobacco packages intend to effectively communicate risks of use, especially to consumers with low literacy levels and children.

However, a recent study conducted by Aparajita Voluntary Health Association (India) shows that despite the law, state’s tobacco industries have been “casual” in complying with the Supreme Court directive.

The survey revealed that many local bidi companies such as New Orissa Bidi, do not have any pack warnings. Khaini brands such as Tura Chhap Khaini does not carry warnings either and neither carry content details on packets.

Of 80 per cent of brands sold in shops, 40 per cent don’t carry any pictorial warnings. It was found that all gutka packets have pictures with very small fonts as warnings.

“The study took a shop at Palaspalli as a sample. Brands such as Panjabi, Safal, Bhar, Raja Khaini, Delux Mix and Navy Cut and Flake cigarettes did carry warnings, but Meenajee, Haradakhandi, Silong and Tulsi did not carry any,” said VHAL project manager Itishree Kanungo. However, the vendor pointed out that brands not carrying the warnings were a part of an older stock.

Brands such as Meenaji and Harada Khandi, however, are yet to include warning on the pack. “Shopkeepers revealed that there has been an impact of warnings on people and sales have gone down,” she said.

Police commissioner Bijaya Kumar Sharma said that the commissionerate had issued letters to cinemas to make them smoking free zones.

“Slides will be shown during intervals for awareness. Also letters have been sent to hotels and educational institutes to implement the COTPA-2003,” he said.

The commissionerate has been stressing on making violation of Section 4 (Prohibition of smoking in Public place) and Section-6 (b) (Prohibition of sale of tobacco products within 100 yards of education institutions) as compoundable offences so that violators are penalised on the spot, said Police Commissioner assuring more follow-ups to the drive.

In March 2009, tobacco products were regularly seized from shops in and around education institutions in Bhubaneswar, including Xavier Institute of Management. The commissionerate had also launched raids near BJB Autonomous College, Kendriya Vidyalaya, St Joseph High School, DAV School (Pokariputput and Unit-VIII), Ekamra College, Capital High School and Unit-1 High School. In October 2008, raids were conducted at shops near Kendriya Vidyalaya, DAV School and St Joseph High School of Bhubaneswar.


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Should we rethink our laws on marijuana?

Monday, September 14th, 2009

“Penalties against drug use should not be more damaging to an individual than the use of the drug itself. Nowhere is this more clear than in the laws against the possession of marijuana in private for personal use,” to quote a past president.

More than 76 million Americans have admittedly tried marijuana. The overwhelming majority of these users did not go on to become regular marijuana users, try other illicit drugs and none overdosed on marijuana. Only 5 percent of Americans have used marijuana in the past year and only 3 percent in any given month, so most marijuana users do not go on to harder drugs but instead quit marijuana.

Convicted marijuana offenders are denied federal financial student aid; even convicted child molesters, rapists and murderers don’t see such penalties. Under federal law, possessing a single marijuana cigarette or less is punishable by up to one year in prison and a $10,000 fine, the same penalty as possession of small amounts of heroin, cocaine or crack.

Yes, many hard drug users did use marijuana previously but they also smoked cigarettes and drank alcohol beforehand, but no one states we should ban these things (as we shouldn’t) as “gateway drugs.” Correlation is not causation. If so, then the causation of marijuana to harder drugs is pretty ineffective.

Is smoking marijuana a good thing? No, of course not. There are negative health effects and many people do abuse it, but the harm we create to not only society but ourselves in making it illegal is worse then the harm of the drug itself. It is strange, that in our society and in most states those who are sick cannot even use marijuana because even that is illegal. While some who are ill can get better with the drug Marinol, not all do and such a decision should be up to patients and their doctors, not our justice system.

This is why organizations such asNORML and DRCnet are so important to ensure that we as a society and nation do not waste precious resources locking up people for things that we might not like.


September 13, 2009 Examiner

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Tobacco enforcement

Friday, September 11th, 2009

Goal: To prevent anyone under 18 from smoking and using tobacco products.
Participants: Berks County Council on Chemical Abuse, police and sheriff’s deputies.
Funding: $43,000 a year from state Department of Health.
Number of checks: 450 stores, each checked three times a year.

How it works

• Adults go with youths ages 15 to 17 to stores to buy tobacco.

• Clerks are required to ask for identification if the customer looks under 25.

• If the clerk does not sell to a minor, the store will receive a letter 30 days later informing the store of the check.

• If the clerk sells to a minor, the store and the clerk are cited.

• The clerk is notified to contact the district justice within 10 days to determine the amount of the fine.

• The clerk and store can pay the fine or request a hearing.

Penalties

First offense
Clerk: $100 to $250
Retailer: $100 to $500

Second offense
Clerk: $250 to $500
Retailer: $500 to $1,000

Third offense
Clerk: $500 to $1,000
Retailer: $3,000 to $5,000

Results

Sales rate to minors of stores checked
July 2006 to June 2007: 6 percent
July 2007 to June 2008: 5 percent
July 2008 to June 2009: 6 percent

Retailers who sold tobacco to minors
July 2006 to June 2007: 109
July 2007 to June 2008: 72
July 2008 to June 2009: 74

Retailers in compliance
July 2006 to June 2007: 1,632
July 2007 to June 2008: 1,312
July 2008 to June 2009: 1, 217


Source: Pennsylvania state law, Berks County Council on Chemical Abuse

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Elliott County Tobacco Festival 2009

Friday, September 4th, 2009

Elliott County Tobacco Festival 2009 – A Tribute to Keith Whitley
September 4th & 5th Sandy Hook streets come to life with family and friends at the Tobacco Festival presented by the Elliott County Volunteer Fire Departments. This free event kicks off on Friday evening, Sept. 4th, at 5:30 pm. Saturday’s events start at 10:00 am.

Get ready for street dancing! This year’s festival promises to keep the crowd as well as dancers on their toes with outstanding performers. Friday night is Bluegrass night with Dave Carroll & New River Line, The Tommy Webb Band and Don Rigsby & Midnight Call. Saturday’s Country Hoe has been extended starting at noon with Clarence Gillum & New Ground, Nashville Recording Star Jon Russell, Korey Blake, Dewayne Messer & New Attitude and Kentucky Bluebird – A Tribute to Keith Whitley Band.
This year’s exciting festival is packed with lots of fun for everyone with nonstop activities from Main Street to the Elliott County School, lots of great food, and many new attractions. So, mark your calendars for September 4th & 5th, Labor Day weekend, and come on out, have a great time and make memories that last. For additional information call (606) 738-6099 or e-mail volunteerfast@gmail.com.

Show Your Bike!
Elliott County Fire Departments are hosting a Motorcycle Show, Saturday, Sept. 5, at 10:00 a.m. in the high school gym parking lot. Categories are Best of Show-Keith Whitley Award, Best Paint and Full Custom. A new category has been added Best Metric. Entry fee is $10 and includes parade registration fee. To keep judging fair, judges will be from out of town and will remain anonymous. All
proceeds go to the Elliott County Fire Departments. You may register by contacting Joe Adkins (606) 776-4248 or Kevin Winkleman (606)738-6000 or you may register Saturday morning at 10:00.

Want to win some CASH?
Cornhole Tournament
Get your throwin’ arms ready and your amin’ straight. Lots of fun with the cornhole tournament at the City Park on Friday, Sept. 4th at 6:00 pm & Saturday, Sept 5th at 4:00 pm. Registration is 1 hour before games start. Entry Fee is $10/Team, with 1st & 2nd Place categories. 1st Place receives 30% of pot and 2nd Place receives 20% of pot. Hosted by the Elliott County Fire Departments. For more information contact Jim Skaggs (606) 738-6011 or (606) 738-6000.

Tobacco Festival Parade
Registration has started or you may register Saturday morning at 10:00 a.m. Line up starts at 11:00 a.m. and parade starts at 1:00 p.m. EVERYONE must fill out registration form. Registration fee is $5. To register or for more information contact Michael Dickerson (606)738-6099 or (606)356-4214.

Elliott County Tobacco Festival Classic Car Show
When: Saturday, Sept. 5th at 10:00 am
Where: School Circle Drive
Entry Fee: $15 and includes parade registration fee, 1st 25 entries receive dash plaque
All proceeds go to the Elliott County Fire Departments. For more information contact Ron or Peggy Lewis (606)738-9436 or (606)495-5608
Other Interests
2009 Tobacco Festival T’s are available.
Pick one up at the Elliott County Ambulance Service or your local fire department.


Michael Dickerson
606-738-6099

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Reynolds,others sue to stop parts of US tobacco law

Tuesday, September 1st, 2009

CHICAGO/NEW YORK, – A group including some top U.S. tobacco companies filed a federal lawsuit on Monday to block provisions of a new tobacco law, arguing it violated their free speech rights under the U.S. constitution.
R.J. Reynolds Tobacco Co, a unit of Reynolds American Inc (RAI.N) that makes Camel and Winston cigarettes, and Lorillard Inc (LO.N), which sells the Newport menthol brand, were among those seeking to void parts of the law.

Altria Group Inc
(MO.N), which makes Marlboro cigarettes and is the largest U.S. tobacco company, is not involved in the case after breaking with rivals to support the law.

The legislation signed on June 22 gives the Food and Drug Administration broad powers for the first time over cigarettes and other tobacco products [ID:nN22512674].

It calls for larger warnings on cigarette packages, restricts vending machine sales, bans most flavored products and curbs print advertisements targeting children. The FDA also has final say over new products and marketing claims such as “light” and “low tar.”

While not challenging the FDA’s authority to regulate tobacco products, tobacco companies say the law goes too far in limiting their commercial speech rights in light of existing bans on television and radio advertisements.

“Even prior to the act, plaintiffs had few avenues of communication for speaking to their adult consumers,” the companies said in the lawsuit filed in a federal court in Kentucky. “The act imposes sweeping and unprecedented restrictions that effectively foreclose those avenues of communication that remain.”

The companies are asking the court to overturn bans on the warning labels, using color and graphics in labels and advertising, some outdoor advertising and sponsorships of sporting and other events.

While commercial speech has less constitutional protection than other speech, the government still faces a high hurdle in trying to restrict it, legal experts said.

“The Supreme Court has rejected the rationale that it is okay to ban tobacco advertising to protect children,” Eugene Volokh, a professor at UCLA School of Law in Los Angeles.

“It has generally held that for advertising of products not legal for children, such as alcohol and tobacco, we cannot just say, ‘children may see an ad and therefore try to get the product illegally.’”

GOOD CASE?

Proponents said the FDA legislation would help curb youth smoking, but legal experts have questioned whether that would make the restrictions legal.
Even one opponent of the tobacco industry said the companies could have a good case.

“The tobacco companies have a very legitimate claim based on the Supreme Court’s own rulings,” Michael Siegel, professor of community health sciences at Boston University’s School of Public Health.

“I question why the crafters of the legislation did not deal with the First Amendment issue appropriately,” he added. “A ruling for the companies would negate a good portion of this legislation.”

Edward Sweda, chief attorney for the Tobacco Products Liability Project at Northeastern University School of Law in Boston, said the tobacco companies already agreed to some advertising restrictions as part of a landmark legal settlement with U.S. states in 1998.

“I am highly doubtful that the Reynolds, Lorillard lawsuit will be ultimately successful,” he said.

Other plaintiffs in the lawsuit include cigarette maker Commonwealth Brands Inc; tobacco retailer Discount Tobacco city & Lottery Inc and National Tobacco Co.

A representative for the FDA said the agency does not comment on pending lawsuits.

The case is Commonwealth Brands Inc vs. United States, U.S. District Court, Western District of Kentucky (Bowling Green), No. 09-117. (Additional reporting by Susan Heavey in Washington, D.C.; editing by John Wallace and Andre Grenon)


© Reuters

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Concern over environmental toll of outdoor heaters

Monday, August 24th, 2009

Home appliance shops estimate there are now over 100,000 outdoor heaters across the country, many installed since the public smoking ban came into force five years ago.

“100,000 homes all using a standard patio heater on average of one hour per week would generate a carbon footprint of approximately 18 000 tonnes, that’s equivalent to a medium-sized car travelling from Auckland to Wellington and back again around 60, 000 times,” says Kathryn Hailes, from Carbonzero programme.

That’s equivalent to a medium-sized car travelling from Auckland to Wellington and back again around 60 000 times.

“If these households stopped using their patio heaters cost savings could be potentially around $20 million dollars per annum, that’s a lot of savings that people could keep in their back pocket rather than using to heat the ambient temperature of the neighbourhood,” says Ms Hailes.

For some that makes outdoor heaters the backyard equivalent of a gas-guzzling hummer.

“What seems very bizarre about them is that we’re busy insulating our houses so that we can minimise the amount of heat that we need to keep warm and here we are burning fuel outside with not even walls let alone insulation heating up the entire universe,” says Jeanette Fitzsimons, Green Party MP.

Environmentalists say they produce the same volume of climate-changing gases as a speeding truck. They’ve also calculated they consume as much energy as five electric fan heaters on full power.

Overseas it’s become a matter of official concern.

In the UK, some shops have already stopped selling the heaters and politicians in the European parliament are in the process of banning them.

Australia too is wondering if the environmental cost is just too high.

Here in New Zealand there are no plans for a ban but the energy efficiency and conservation authority says it’s keeping a close eye on developments in Australia.

Jeanette Fitzsimons doesn’t support a ban but says she is concerned about the heater’s carbon footprint.

“These gas heaters are quite powerful they do chew through a lot of gas compared with what you would burn to heat your home. There’d be a lot more energy going through an outdoor gas heater than a gas heater in your living room but many in the hospitality industry say business would suffer without outside heating,” says Geoff Tuttle, bar manager.

“We probably have over 50 percent of our business in outdoor trading and on nights like tonight and in the winter it gets a bit nippy. If it’s not wet and still is certainly cold and we need to keep the people warm with the smoking law people do want to be outside and if it’s cold they’re not going to enjoy it.

Customers we spoke to didn’t think a ban was the right way of dealing with the issue.

“It’s a question of personal responsibility of the person using them and that’s one of the things that a price on carbon emissions will start to create as it will raise the price of fuel and then people can decide ‘Do I really want to spend that much on outdoor heating or have I got better things to do with the money and the fuel,’ and for those determined to head outdoors on chilly evenings there’s always the option of putting on another jersey,” says Ms Fitzsimmons.

© 3news

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Chocolate hazelnut cigars

Friday, August 21st, 2009

chocolate cigarsIngredients
* 2 sheets filo pastry
* 25g butter, melted
* 3/4 cup dry roasted hazelnuts, finely chopped
* 2 tablespoons honey, warmed
* 100g dark chocolate, chopped

Method

1. Preheat oven to 200°C/180°C fan-forced. Line a baking tray with baking paper. Place 1 sheet pastry on work surface. Brush with butter. Top with remaining sheet. Brush with butter. Cut pastry into quarters. Cut each piece in half to make 8 pieces. Combine nuts and honey in a bowl. Spoon 1 tablespoon nut mixture over each piece. Brush pastry edges with butter. Starting from 1 long side, roll up pastry to enclose filling, folding in edges to make cigar shapes.
2. Place cigars on prepared tray. Brush with remaining butter. Bake for 8 to 10 minutes or until golden and crisp. Cool.
3. Place chocolate in a heatproof, microwave-safe bowl. Microwave, uncovered, on high (100%) for 1 to 2 minutes, stirring every 30 seconds, or until melted and smooth.
4. Pour chocolate into a small jug. Dip half of each cigar in chocolate. Place on a wire rack to set. Serve.

Notes & tips

* Nutrition data is per cigar.

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Source: Super Food Ideas

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