If you're a
smoker, don't even bother going to China,because
now it has become an offence to smoke in public as the country introduce new
tough regulation which bans smoking in restaurants, offices and on public
transport in capital, Beijing.
China has over 300 million smokers and more than a million Chinese die
from smoking-related illnesses every year. Smoking bans already
existed in China, but have largely failed to crack down on the habit.
A common greeting among men is to offer a cigarette - the
more expensive, the better. A carton of cigarettes also remains a popular gift.
Anti-tobacco campaigners say many smokers are simply unaware
of the health risks of their habit. They accuse the authorities of being
addicted to the tax revenues generated by cigarette sales and therefore not
warning smokers about the dangers.
But now there are signs the government has changed its mind.
In the past, China's leaders such as Chairman Mao and his successor Deng
Xiaoping were rarely seen without a cigarette in hand. But the current
President Xi Jinping has bucked the trend: he's quit. And he's also banned
officials from smoking in public in order to set an example.
The
new rules were agreed by lawmakers in November 2014 but only came into effect on 1 June.
Under the legislation lawbreakers in Beijing will be fined
200 yuan (£21; $32) and businesses that turn a blind eye could be fined up to
10,000 yuan.
Repeat
offenders will be named and shamed on a government website, according to the
Reuters news agency.
The new law also cracks down on tobacco advertising across
the city.
The World
Health Organization has welcomed the new tougher regulations.
"When implemented, this new law will permanently bring
clean air to all of Beijing's indoor public places - in doing so, protecting
Beijing's more than 20 million residents from the deadly effects of exposure to
toxic second-hand smoke," said its representative in China, Dr Bernhard
Schwartlander.
1 comment:
we need such law in Nigeria that will cover even the so called politicians
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