NGO wants strict monitoring of ban on sale of cigarettes to under-aged

The Mandate Health Empowerment Initiative (MHEI), a Non-Governmental Organisation (NGO) has urged the Federal Government to ensure strict monitoring of the ban on the sale of cigarettes to persons under 18 years.
Mr Ameh Zion, the President of MHEI, made the call in an interview with the News Agency of Nigeria (NAN) in Abuja on Saturday.
Zion
said that only strict monitoring would ensure total compliance with the
stipulations of the ban by marketers, distributors and sellers of
cigarettes.
He said major sellers and distributors
of the substance should be given the mandate to collect and confirm
personal information of buyers to ensure the latter met the age bracket.
According to Zion, this strategy will help with the monitoring of the sale of cigarettes to under-aged persons in the country.
“This
ban by the Federal Government is a welcome development as it will boost
the campaign against substance use and abuse in the country.
“We
hope to ride on this development in taking our mental health campaign
to the grassroots because an investigation has shown that substance
abuse is one of the causes of mental disorder.
“We
have also discovered various communities within the territory where
drug and substance abuse is on the rise. Carrying out monitoring will
not be an easy task.
“The Federal
Government needs to work with major producers and distributors of this
substance and give them the mandate to check and identify buyers,’’ Zion said.
NAN
reports that the Minister of Health, Prof. Isaac Adewole, had on June 1
announced the enforcement of a ban on the sale of cigarettes to persons
less than 18 years in Nigeria.
The minister made the announcement in Abuja at a briefing to mark the “World No Tobacco Day”.
He called for the immediate implementation and enforcement of key sections of the 2015 National Tobacco Control (NTC) Act.
Adewole
said that government would begin to implement the prohibition of the
sale of tobacco products to and by anyone below 18 and ban on the sale
of cigarettes in single sticks.
He said cigarettes
must now be sold in packs of 20 sticks only, and smokeless tobacco
should be sold in a minimum of a pack of 30 grammes.
He
also banned the sale or offer for sale or distribution of tobacco or
tobacco products through the mail, the internet or other online devices
including the prohibition of interference of tobacco industry in public
health and related issues.
According to a World
Health Organisation estimate, more than 4.5 million Nigerian adults are
addicted to smoking tobacco substances.
NGO wants strict monitoring of ban on sale of cigarettes to under-aged
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