A group of campaigners from the world anti-smoking coalition has arrived in the country to partner the Ghana Health Service (GHS) and the media to push the tobacco free agenda forward.
The objective of the group is to advocate the passage of the National Tobacco Control Bill in Ghana to give meaning to the ratification of the tobacco control treaty introduced by the World Health Organisation (WHO) in 2003.
The WHO treaty, known as the Framework Convention on Tobacco Control, has the objective of reducing the public health toll from tobacco, since the treaty obliges the countries that ratify it to adopt measures that include bans on advertising tobacco products, requirements that all ingredients used be listed on packaging-and broader legal liability for manufacturers, which include payment of higher taxes.
The anti-tobacco team which is made up of members of the Physicians for a Smoke-Free Canada and the Environmental Rights Action/Friends of the Earth, Nigeria - have already met officials of the Food and Drugs Board (FDB), the Customs, Excise and Preventive Service (CEPS), the Ghana Health Service (GHS), some media houses and other stakeholders to push the issues of smoke-free environment in Ghana forward.
During a visit to the Daily Graphic in Accra the Executive Director of the Physicians for a Smoke-Free Canada, Ms Cynthia Callard, said that there was the need to protect the lives of non-smokers from the activities of those who had chosen to die through smoking and, therefore, called for the immediate passage of the bill.
She said countries should not be deceived by the few dividends they received from tobacco manufacturing companies, since they ended up spending even more on the health of the people because of the effects of tobacco.
Ms Callard said Ghana's failure to pass the bill was making the rest of the countries in the sub-region to adopt wait-and-see attitude, since many of them considered Ghana as a pacesetter when it came to policy formulation.
She said it was important that stringent measures were adopted to free the world of tobacco, since 50 per cent of people who smoked globally would eventually be killed by tobacco if they did not stop it.
Other members of the team that visited the Daily Graphic were the Research Director of the Physicians for a Free-Smoke Canada, Mr Neil Collishaw; the Programme Manager of Environmental Rights Action/Friends of the Earth, Nigeria, Mr Akinbode Oluwafemi; a Senior Health Research Officer and the Focal Person for Thbacco Control of the GHS, Mrs Edith Koryo Wellington; and a Health Promotion Specialist of the GHS in Tamale, Alhaji Abdul-Rahman Yakubu.
Source: Daily Graphic
DISCLAIMER: The Views, Comments, Opinions, Contributions and Statements made by Readers and Contributors on this platform do not necessarily represent the views or policy of Multimedia Group Limited.
Tags:
Latest Stories
-
Maiden Women in Chemical Sciences conference opens with a call for empowerment
36 mins -
We’ll reclaim all Groupe Nduom stolen assets – Nduom declares
43 mins -
Center for Learning and Childhood Development Director Dr Kwame Sakyi honoured at Ghana Philanthropy Awards
10 hours -
Asantehene receives 28 looted artefacts
11 hours -
CAF WCL 2024: Ghana’s Thelma Baffour wins title with TP Mazembe
11 hours -
Benjamin Boakye slams politicisation of energy sector issues and ECG’s inefficiencies
11 hours -
Erastus Asare Donkor and Dr Neta Parsram win big at 10th Mining Industry Awards
12 hours -
Government is “suppressing information” about power sector challenges – IES Director
12 hours -
Majority of our debts caused by forex shortfall – ECG Boss
12 hours -
Pan-African Savings and Loans supports Ghana Blind Union with boreholes
13 hours -
Bole-Bamboi MP Yussif Sulemana donates to artisans and Bole SHS
13 hours -
Top up your credit to avoid potential disruption – ECG to Nuri meter customers
13 hours -
Dutch & Co wins 2024 Entrepreneur of the Year Award
13 hours -
We’ll cut down imports and boost consumption of local rice and other products – Mahama
16 hours -
Prof Opoku-Agyemang donates to Tamale orphanage to mark her birthday
17 hours