YUH TIMCHIA
Forty-four per cent of pupils in Cameroonian schools
have already had their first contact with tobacco and the gory statistic could
get worse, an anti-tobacco organization has warned.
The Cameroon Coalition against Tobacco further states
that 15 per cent of the people below the age of 15 were among 17.5 per cent of
the country’s smoking population.
The organization is pushing for anti-tobacco laws to
be urgently implemented in the country.
Cameroon became a signatory to the World Health
Organization Framework Convention for Tobacco Control (WHO FCTC) in May 2006.
Parties to the treaty, which obliges signatories to
cut back on tobacco consumption and exposure to secondary smoke, adopted the
Protocol to Eliminate Illicit Trade in Tobacco Products in November last year.
But experts believe Cameroon had remained a key
cigarette-smuggling and contraband hub with tobacco companies using illegal
channels to keep the business alive.
The situation was further compounded by counterfeiting
which was a serious threat to public health, they say.
The main targets
Dr Flore Ndembiyembe, the president of the Cameroon
Coalition against Tobacco, says the world’s major tobacco producers, driven by
strict laws in the West, were shifting the focus of their commercial strategies
to developing countries where anti-tobacco regulations were weak or
non-existent.
The organization says out of 6 million tobacco-related
deaths globally every year, 80 per cent occurred in the developing world,
mainly in Africa where tobacco consumption swelled by 4.3 per cent annually.
Youths who make up the bulk of Cameroon’s over 20
million citizens were the main targets of cigarette producing companies, it
claims.
Some 28.8 per cent of Cameroonian men and 8.1 per cent
of women smoke, while 37 per cent of the country’s populations were exposed to
tobacco smoke in public and family circles.
“Only simple, clear rigorous laws, which are possible
to respect, will guarantee the public’s power to benefit from pure air without
tobacco smoke,” Dr Flore Ndembiyembe says.
In March 2014, the parliamentarians had a workshop
with the Cameroonian coalition against tobacco which took place on the
Ngoa-ekelle glass house. It was an
occasion for the parliamentarians to have new knowledge’s about tobacco
control. At the end of this workshop, the parliamentarians promised to work for
the adoption of a anti-tobacco law in Cameroon.
There has been a series of ministerial orders
designating non-smoking areas like government buildings and schools, and
regulating cigarette advertising, promotion, sale and packaging.
But anti-tobacco campaigners say these measures were
not comprehensive and had so far not been effective.
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