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EU also studying plain-packaging law for tobacco
It comes after an Australian court ruling requiring tobacco products to be sold in unbranded packaging with graphic health warnings.
Thu, Aug 16 2012 at 2:48 PM
The World Health Organization blames smoking for 6 million deaths per year. (Photo: AFP)
The European Commission said on Thursday it too could shortly make legislative proposals that would force manufacturers to distribute tobacco products across Europe in plain packaging.
After a ground-breaking Australian court ruling requiring cigarettes and other tobacco products to be sold in unbranded uniform packaging with graphic health warnings from December 1, a spokesman for the EU executive said "the Commission is following this development in Australia closely."
"We are working on a proposal to revise the (EU) tobacco products directive" later in the year, Antony Gravili told a regular news briefing, underlining that "many things are being discussed including the possibility of plain packaging."
He added, referring to graphic health warnings currently required on the reverse of branded packets in Europe: "One of the things we're looking at is for example making the image on the package larger."
Australia said Thursday it has no plans to ban smoking after the High Court of Australia ruling in response to a manufacturers' challenge.
However, the World Health Organization, which blames smoking for 6 million deaths per year, expressed its hope that the decision taken in Australia would trigger a global "domino effect."
States including Canada and New Zealand are already looking at similar measures.
The autonomous government in Scotland, after Ireland one of the first to ban smoking in public places in Europe, was already due to outlaw all tobacco product display at point-of-sale in October last year.
Edinburgh is hoping to be able to announce a new date soon, having been forced to delay its plans amid legal challenges from big manufacturers.
Australia is still facing action at the World Trade Organization over the plan from Ukraine, Honduras and the Dominican Republic, as well as an investment treaty lawsuit filed by Philip Morris Asia in Hong Kong.
Legal experts warned that the Hong Kong case was "particularly concerning" because Australia's bilateral investment treaty with the Chinese territory did not have special clauses for public health measures as seen in WTO agreements.
Copyright 2012 AFP Global Edition
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