Public Security chief launches digital vehicle plate wallet service    'Action is in our nature': 4th Saudi Green Initiative Forum to be held at COP16    Pop hit APT too distracting for South Korea's exam-stressed students    Saudi Arabia's inflation rate hits 1.9% in October, the highest in 14 months    Mohammed Al-Habib Real Estate Co. sets Guinness World Record with largest continuous concrete pour    PIF completes largest-ever accelerated bookbuild offering in MENA region    Saudi Arabia signs renewable energy program with Azerbaijan, Kazakhstan and Uzbekistan at COP29    Australia and Saudi Arabia settle for goalless draw in AFC Asian Qualifiers    Human Rights Watch accuses Israel of mass displacement in Gaza amounting to war crime    Thousands of protesters march in Paris ahead of tense football match between France and Israel    Republicans win 218 US House seats, giving Donald Trump control of government    UN sounds alarm at Israel's 'severe violations' at key buffer zone with Syria    Order vs. Morality: Lessons from New York's 1977 Blackout    Saudi, Indian foreign ministers co-chair Cooperation Committee meeting in New Delhi    South Korean actor Song Jae Lim found dead at 39    Don't sit on the toilet for more than 10 minutes, doctors warn    'Marvels of Saudi Orchestra' to dazzle audience in Tokyo on Nov. 22    Saudi Champion Saeed Al-Mouri scores notable feat in Radical World Championship in Abu Dhabi with support from Bin-Shihon Group    Rita Ora is tearful in tribute to Liam Payne at MTV Awards    France to deploy 4,000 police officers for UEFA Nations League match against Israel    Al Nassr edges past Al Riyadh with Mane's goal to move up to third    India puts blockbuster Pakistani film on hold    The Vikings and the Islamic world    Filipino pilgrim's incredible evolution from an enemy of Islam to its staunch advocate    Exotic Taif Roses Simulation Performed at Taif Rose Festival    Asian shares mixed Tuesday    Weather Forecast for Tuesday    Saudi Tourism Authority Participates in Arabian Travel Market Exhibition in Dubai    Minister of Industry Announces 50 Investment Opportunities Worth over SAR 96 Billion in Machinery, Equipment Sector    HRH Crown Prince Offers Condolences to Crown Prince of Kuwait on Death of Sheikh Fawaz Salman Abdullah Al-Ali Al-Malek Al-Sabah    HRH Crown Prince Congratulates Santiago Peña on Winning Presidential Election in Paraguay    SDAIA Launches 1st Phase of 'Elevate Program' to Train 1,000 Women on Data, AI    41 Saudi Citizens and 171 Others from Brotherly and Friendly Countries Arrive in Saudi Arabia from Sudan    Saudi Arabia Hosts 1st Meeting of Arab Authorities Controlling Medicines    General Directorate of Narcotics Control Foils Attempt to Smuggle over 5 Million Amphetamine Pills    NAVI Javelins Crowned as Champions of Women's Counter-Strike: Global Offensive (CS:GO) Competitions    Saudi Karate Team Wins Four Medals in World Youth League Championship    Third Edition of FIFA Forward Program Kicks off in Riyadh    Evacuated from Sudan, 187 Nationals from Several Countries Arrive in Jeddah    SPA Documents Thajjud Prayer at Prophet's Mosque in Madinah    SFDA Recommends to Test Blood Sugar at Home Two or Three Hours after Meals    SFDA Offers Various Recommendations for Safe Food Frying    SFDA Provides Five Tips for Using Home Blood Pressure Monitor    SFDA: Instant Soup Contains Large Amounts of Salt    Mawani: New shipping service to connect Jubail Commercial Port to 11 global ports    Custodian of the Two Holy Mosques Delivers Speech to Pilgrims, Citizens, Residents and Muslims around the World    Sheikh Al-Issa in Arafah's Sermon: Allaah Blessed You by Making It Easy for You to Carry out This Obligation. Thus, Ensure Following the Guidance of Your Prophet    Custodian of the Two Holy Mosques addresses citizens and all Muslims on the occasion of the Holy month of Ramadan    







Thank you for reporting!
This image will be automatically disabled when it gets reported by several people.



New Zealand smoking ban: Māori mourn loss of hard-won reform
Published in The Saudi Gazette on 11 - 12 - 2023

When New Zealand's new government announced it was scrapping the country's world-leading tobacco laws, it came as a particularly hard blow to Māori people.
With the Indigenous community having the highest smoking rates, its leaders had fought for reforms for years.
The country's model was the first to spell a complete end to smoking — and so was hailed by health advocates globally.
From 2024, the laws would have cut nicotine levels in cigarettes to non-addictive levels, eliminated 90% of retailers allowed to sell tobacco, and created "smoke-free" generations of citizens by banning cigarette sales to anyone born after 2008. But with the measures now abandoned, Māori stand to lose the most, advocates say.
Last year, Teresa Butler and her six-year-old daughter sat in front of a room full of politicians, begging them to enact the laws.
Dressed in a traditional feathered cloak, her voice quavered as she thrust a photo of her mother at the committee. She presented the death certificate.
Cause of death: Emphysema, the result of more than 30 years of tobacco smoking.
Teresa had her first cigarette aged eight. She recalls running down to the shops in Christchurch, with five dollars in hand and a note from her mum for a packet of smokes.
She only kicked the habit when she fell pregnant.
"I wanted a healthy baby to continue a healthy strong whakapapa [family line]," she said.
She has spent the last seven years of her life as an anti-smoking counselor, going into Māori neighborhoods to try and wean people off the deadly addiction.
These days, only 8% of New Zealand's adult population are daily smokers, but the number is more than double that- 19.9% — among Māori. It is even higher among Māori women.
It takes a toll, not only on health but finances.
A packet of cigarettes in New Zealand costs NZ$40 (£19; $24) on average. Chain smokers can inhale a pack a day.
"It's stress, it's a lack of education, they have children, they're single mums," says Ms Butler, relaying a typical encounter.
"I go into a home and I can clearly see her kids don't have any nappies on. There's no food in the cupboard. And I'm saying to her: 'It's winter time, you've got no power. Why don't you have any money?' And she'll tell me: "Because I've just spent the last $30 on smokes."
Smokers tell her they want to kick the habit but feel trapped.
"They say to me: 'Look, it's too easy to access this Teresa. I can wake up at one o'clock in the morning, have anxiety, be depressed and go down to the local shop, the 24-hour petrol station and purchase cigarettes.' It's just a quick fix, just like alcohol."
The proposed policies — especially denicotization and the so-called Smokefree generation — have never been implemented anywhere.
But public health researchers considered New Zealand — a high-income country of just over five million people — an ideal setting to try and achieve tobacco "endgame".
What was new here was the focus: targeting the industry, not the individual.
Almost all smokers will tell you that they want to stop, researchers say. The problem, for many, is individual capability and access to resources.
Like other countries, New Zealand had already had anti-smoking measures in place for years: excise increases on cigarettes, a Quitline phone service, and mass media campaigns carrying health warnings.
But while these helped drive down the smoking rate for European and Asian populations, the rate among Māori and Pasifika groups remained stubbornly high at around 20%.
"The problem we realized was because it was reliant on individuals too much," says Andrew Waa, an associate professor of public health at the University of Otago who is Māori and who has led several tobacco control studies in the country.
He says these measures targeted "more superficial aspects" of tobacco control — for example focusing on helping people quit — instead of targeting fundamental causes for why people take up smoking and continue to smoke — like the widespread availability of cigarettes, and the tobacco industry's role.
And the resources needed to quit aren't equally distributed across New Zealand, researchers say. There remain significant hurdles.
There are many drivers behind "health inequity" — but the underlying reasons are rooted in New Zealand's colonial history. White Europeans took over the Pacific nation in the 18th century.
"Colonisation is an underlying driver of ethnic inequalities in smoking behavior," Associate Prof Waa and other researchers wrote in the Tobacco Control journal last year.
They noted Indigenous people's experience of generational theft, racism and cyclical poverty were the "basic causes" affecting access to income and housing and overall health.
So when the Smokefree measures were introduced in 2021, the resounding praise from public health circles was rooted in the view that such policies would vastly improve health equity.
And in a clear example of best practice, where policy is enacted not "on" Māori but "by" Māori, the laws were also the direct extension of a political push by Maori politicians in the mid-2000s, when one MP first suggested an end to tobacco sales.
In 2010, Māori legislators set up the country's first large-scale inquiry into tobacco's harm on Māori and other communities nationally- the parliament inquiry heard from a range of groups across the country.
The results led to the New Zealand government in 2011 setting one of the most daring public health targets in the world: a smoke-free country by 2025, with smoking prevalence under 5%.
However the National government at the time did little by way of policy to achieve it, researchers say.
It was only Jacinda Ardern's government, a decade later, who decided to launch a package of radical reforms to get the country and in particular its Māori people across the finish line.
She appointed Ayesha Verrall, a doctor and epidemiologist, as health minister — who prioritized Māori community consultation in shaping legislation. The government further dedicated $14m to community health programs, and set up Te Aka Whai Ora, the Maori Health Authority, an independent government body that sets Māori health policy and tailors the country's health system delivery to Indigenous people.
The scientific modelling backed up the Smokefree reforms. Simulation studies conducted by Associate Prof Waa and other researchers concluded the measures would see the smoking rate for Māori drop to 7.8% by 2025, compared to a 2040 timeframe under the previous smoking policy.
More profoundly, the mortality gap for Māori women would be shortened 23%, for Māori men nearly 10%.
"It is unlikely that any other feasible health intervention would reduce ethnic inequalities in mortality by as much," the researchers wrote.
But New Zealanders in October voted in a change of government.
The conservative coalition then said it intended to repeal the health laws to fund tax cuts — a policy blindside given the leading National party never once mentioned the Smokefree laws during campaigning. The new government also plans to dismantle the Māori Health Authority.
"We thought that once the legislation was passed last year it was a done deal. So we're really confused as to how and why this can happen," says a furious Ms Butler.
"It's heartbreaking because this is life-changing, life-saving legislation, particularly for Māori," she says.
Currently about 5,000 people die each year in New Zealand from smoking and smoking-related problems — nearly a 1,000 of whom are Māori.
National has said they feared the smoking crackdown would fuel an already existing black market for tobacco in New Zealand and increase crime — arguments first used by tobacco companies opposing the laws.
Prime Minister Christopher Luxon argued that reducing the number of retailers would turn the shops left selling tobacco into a "massive magnet for crime". Meanwhile, Deputy Prime Minister Winston Peters has argued the smoking ban is a violation of people's rights and free choice.
The finance minister also revealed that the "about a billion dollars" in tax raised from cigarette sales would go directly into funding "tax relief for working Kiwis". It has blamed negotiations with Act and New Zealand First, two right-wing, populist minor parties it needed to form government, for forcing their hand.
The New Zealand Health Minister's office admitted to the BBC the repeal of Smokefree laws were "not a National Party policy — but that's the nature of a negotiation."
But previous government modeling had shown that Smokefree would save the country's healthcare system NZ$2.29bn (£1.12bn;$1.4bn) over two decades.
Dr Shane Reti, the new Health Minister, has faced calls from the nation's practitioners to step down from his medical registrations — given his abandonment of the public health policy.
His office told the BBC the government "remained committed to reducing smoking rates" but did not answer questions on how it would achieve that now with the Smokefree policies scrapped.
Critics have also raised questions about the tobacco industry's influence in the policy reversal. New Zealand had been viewed as the dangerous 'endgame' precedent for Big Tobacco, Prof Waa says.
Since New Zealand announced the laws in 2021, they have inspired other countries; the UK this year also announced ambitions for a smoke-free generation.
The National Party declined to answer the BBC's questions about political funding from tobacco companies.
Meanwhile, health activists and Māori leaders are fighting again to keep their hard-won reform. More than 20,000 New Zealanders signed a petition last week calling for the laws to stay.
"We simply cannot afford to go backwards, while our whānau continue to die at the hands of this product," read the Hāpai Te Hauora petition.
Thousands also protested on the streets in capital city protests around the country last week, criticizing the incoming government for its "anti-Māori" policies with many singling out the dismantling of Smokefree laws.
But there are murmurings and concerns that the government, with a majority in parliament, could scrap the laws early next year. — BBC


Clic here to read the story from its source.