A picture taken yesterday shows a sample of a ‘plain cigarette packaging’ cigarette box
proposed by the ‘Alliance contre le tabac’ (alliance against tobacco) association.
AFP/Paris
France said yesterday that it would introduce plain cigarette packaging and ban electronic cigarettes in certain public places, in a bid to reduce high smoking rates among the under-16s.
Following a successful similar campaign in Australia, Health Minister Marisol Touraine said that cigarette packets would be “the same shape, same size, same colour, same typeset” to make smoking less attractive to young smokers.
“In France, 13mn adults smoke on a daily basis. And the situation is getting worse. The number of smokers is growing, especially among young people,” said Touraine. “We can’t accept that tobacco kills 73,000 people every year in our country – the equivalent of a plane crash every day with 200 people on board.”
France has one of the highest rates of under-16s smoking in Europe and, in addition to the plain packaging measures, Touraine also announced that smoking would be banned in playgrounds and in cars with passengers under 12.
European Union laws already force tobacco firms to cover 65% of the packaging with health warnings.
But France wants to go further and follow Australia’s example, to the fury of the tobacco companies.
Celine Audibert, spokeswoman for French firm Seita, which is a subsidiary of Imperial Tobacco, slammed the move as “completely incomprehensible”.
“It’s based on the Australian experience which, more than a failure, was a complete fiasco,” added Audibert.
In 2012, Australia forced all cigarettes to be sold in identical, olive-brown packets bearing the same typeface and largely covered with graphic health warnings.
Unlike Australia, however, French brands will remain on the packets “but limited to a very discreet and defined size, always on the same place on the packet”, according to the plan.