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China Bans Cigarette Ads in Schools Source from: AsiaOne (sg) 01/31/2013 Imagine sending your child to a school named after a cigarette brand. Or seeing the school walls bear slogans such as "tobacco makes you a talent". Such actions have come under fire recently, after the release of a three-year government plan to curb a habit responsible for at least a million tobacco-related deaths in China a year. Led by the Ministry of Industry and Information Technology and the state quality and quarantine office, the plan aims to cut smokers' numbers from 301 million to 292 million through efforts such as the immediate banning of indirect advertising through sponsorship. "Young people should be protected from tobacco. The government should be responsible for this," said public health expert Zhao Liang of Peking University, in support of the ban. On paper, China, being a member of the World Health Organisation's tobacco control framework convention, bans tobacco ads. But Chinese cigarette makers - such as the Hongyun Honghe Group or the Hongta Group, which are all state-owned and enjoy an overwhelming 97 per cent share of the market - get around this by funding charity projects, especially educational ones. As early as 2009, anti-smoking activist Wu Yiqun noticed tobacco brands planting their influence among the impressionable young. She came across two schools in remote parts of south-western Sichuan province with the word "tobacco" in their names as they were funded by cigarette makers. One of them, Sichuan Tobacco Hope School, even displayed the slogan, "Hard work makes you a genius, tobacco makes you a talent", said Ms Wu, of Beijing's Thinktank Research Centre for Health Development. "There were many reports on the practice, but the schools did nothing about it," she told The Straits Times. It was only in July last year, when state broadcaster Central China Television (CCTV) revisited the issue, that the two schools dropped the cigarette brands from their names, she added. To enforce the ban, the authorities will have to take action against an estimated 100 rural schools, she said. This is because individual cigarette brands are reported to have each sponsored tens of these schools, calling them Red Pagoda Hope School or Zhongnanhai Aixin School, for example, she said. Stubbing out indirect tobacco advertising in schools will clear the air among students over whether it is all right to smoke, even if they know of the ill-effects, said Tsinghua University lecturer Qian Xiaojun, who focuses on corporate social responsibility. |