Britain is considering a ban on cigarette vending machines,
removing cigarettes from display in shops and outlawing the sale of
packets of 10, health minister Alan Johnson said.
In 2007, Britain joined several other countries in banning smoking
in enclosed public places and the government is now keen to try and
stop people starting to smoke in their teenage years.
Johnson, a smoker in his youth, said he would be launching a
consultation paper on new anti-smoking measures next week.
He said 200,000 children under 16 years of age start smoking each
year in Britain and the risk of premature death for them was three
times higher than for people who start in their 20s.
Johnson said Scotland was right to force stores to take cigarettes
off display, and that bans on cigarette vending machines in other
European countries had been successful.
"I think they're right to do that and indeed we are considering
that as well and we'll launch a consultation document on that next
week," he told the BBC.
"Banning vending machines where you can't have any control over the
age of the person who's buying it -- it happened in many other
European countries a long time ago with startling results.
"Whether you should be able to buy 10 cigarettes or whether you
should insist that you can only buy 20, that's an issue we need to
look at very closely," he said. "You should go for 20s."
Scotland's Public Health Minister Shona Robison unveiled plans last
week to ban the display of cigarettes in shops. The Scottish plans
also include outlawing packs of 10.
Anti-smoking campaigners welcomed Johnson's plans.
"The government is to be congratulated for announcing this
ambitious consultation on a comprehensive new strategy to drive
down smoking, so soon after successfully implementing smoke-free
legislation," Deborah Arnott, director of Action on Smoking and
Health (ASH) said in a statement.
"We welcome the focus on protecting children, as two-thirds of
smokers start smoking before they reach 18, significantly
increasing their risk of dying from cancer," she said.
UK plans more anti-smoking measures
Published: 12:37PM Monday May 26, 2008 Source: Reuters
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