
Members of an anti-smoking group demonstrates against TabInfo Asia 2009 (an Asia Pacific tobacco industry event) in Bangkok Nov. 11, 2009. Over 500 anti-smoking protestors demonstrated against the tobacco meetings in Bangkok as manufacturers of tobacco gathered to discuss smoking regulations. (Chaiwat Subprasom/Reuters)
Asia's pushback to big tobacco
The cigarette industry wants a bigger slice of Asia. Activists want them to butt out.
BANGKOK, Thailand – Assailed by the western world’s laws, taxes and anti-smoking mores, the global tobacco industry has little choice but to keep pushing eastward into Asia.
Tobacco bosses learned this week that some Asians are ready to push back.
This week, more than 500 screaming protesters converged outside TabInfo Asia 2009, the region’s largest tobacco summit in years. More than an expo, the event is also a strategy session conducted in secrecy.
“As rules, regulations, and perceptions of tobacco change around the globe, Asia Pacific has become one of the world's most important tobacco markets,” according to promotional materials.
The event, set up by the Raleigh, N.C.-based Tobacco Reporter magazine, invited major industry players gathered to discuss “operating in a world of bans” and “ingenious ways of operating in an increasingly regulated, plain-pack, dark market environment.”
“Asia is the fastest growing tobacco market in the world. They can’t afford to ignore this region,” said Prakit Vathesatogkit, executive secretary of the Bangkok-based Action on Smoking and Health Foundation.
“We can’t really stop them from coming,” Prakit said, “but we can try to stop them from circumventing regulation.”
On Wednesday, the summit’s first day, attendees were beset by a loose coalition of Southeast Asian anti-smoking protesters. Outside the event doors, a 500-plus crowd of mostly college students screamed at men in suits entering Bangkok’s largest convention center.
The opposition group also presented nearly 90,000 signatures from Asians opposed to the event. Under pressure from the government, the state-owned Thailand Tobacco Monopoly, which produces the kingdom’s top-selling cigarette brands, pulled its exhibitions and replaced them with booths promoting Thai tourism.
“The event organizers were quite upset,” Prakit said. “I admit, this is an unfamiliar role for health groups. Normally, we don’t stage protests. But this was a special situation.”
Organizers refused repeated requests by GlobalPost for interviews, both via e-mail and in person. Even the event’s exact location was obscured and marked only with a sign reading “Private Event.” Journalists, an organizer said, were forbidden from entering.
Less regulated than the Western world, Asia holds great promise for the tobacco industry. There are already some 125 million smokers in the 10-country Association of Southeast Nations, which stretches from Burma to the Philippines, according to the Southeast Asia Tobacco Control Alliance.
That accounts for about 31 percent of the region's population. China, the world’s largest cigarette market, is home to 350 million smokers.
Asia’s various anti-smoking laws are also easy to exploit, said Mary Assunta, a senior policy advisor for the alliance. Though Thailand was picked to host the tobacco summit, its anti-smoking laws are actually some of the region’s most strict.
Thanks for bringing this important story to light. The overt shift of the tobacco industry from the the richest countries to low and middle-income countries is a story we don't see told nearly enough, particularly in Asia. The shift is clearly calculated to sustain growth and evade markets where health policy has finally started to catch up to a dangerous product. Countries like the Philippines and Indonesia lag far behind so shining a light on Thailand, which has done well by comparison, is a good start.
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