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The popularity of chewable tobacco, particularly among the young, is a growing concern for doctors in India. They are already reporting a rise in pre-cancerous lesions in the mouth. But what's the reason for this? | |||||||||||||||||||||||
Are
brightly coloured packets of Guthka targetting children?
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Wrapped inside a betel leaf
and placed in the side of the mouth, tobacco has been chewed for centuries in India. But it is only in the last
decade that tobacco companies have started selling tobacco ready-packaged
in small sachets. |
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GUTKHA | ||||||||||||||||||||||
Some Gutkha are chocolate flavoured; others are sold as mouth
fresheners. In addition, some manufacturers package Gutkha as if it were a sweet - bright colours and children's faces decorate the wrappers. |
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In Mumbai, India's commercial capital, they are sold by street vendors virtually everywhere. They are popular with street children and teenagers can go through up to 15 packets a day. According to health officials, some children like Gutkha because it's an appetite suppressant. MOUTH CANCER As health experts know that children started using Gutkha six or seven years ago, they fear an epidemic of oral cancer will soon hit India. They say 11 and 12-year-old children are getting pre-cancerous growths after just two years of chewing. Dentists and trading standards officers in the United Kingdom are now trying to highlight the health risks involved in chewing tobacco as Gutkha slowly makes its way to Europe. |
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Voluntary health warnings have started appearing on some packets of Gutkha but anti-tobacco campaigners want tougher Government action to control their sale - especially to the young. Already phenomenally popular in the north western states of Maharashta and Gujarat, doctors fear Gutkha will penetrate all over the country. |
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Mumbai's annual
film festival - the Bollywood Oscars - is sponsored by one of
the main producers of Gutkha. |
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BEEDIES Smoking beedies - the traditional Indian hand-rolled cigarette - is less socially acceptable. Men and boys will not smoke in front of their elders, and women almost never smoke. It is a woman's job to roll them though. |
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There have also been reports that some beedie manufacturers use
child labour. On the streets of Mumbai billboards advertising cigarettes jostle for space with those promoting mobile phones and internet start-ups. |
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A packet of twenty beedies costs about 5 Rupees (11 US cents); cigarettes are much more expensive. A western style brand will cost 65 rupees per packet. |
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GOA PAVES
THE WAY "It took us 100 years to free ourselves from British colonialism. It has taken us 400 years already to free ourselves from the colonialism that is tobacco".
In 1997, Dr
Vaidya persuaded the Goan legislature to pass the toughest anti-tobacco
laws in the world. |
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TOUGH ANTI-TOBACCO LAWS Government officials say India accounts for nearly a third of an estimated three million tobacco-related deaths in the world (per year). In 2001, officials in Delhi, the Indian capital, banned the sale of cigarettes to people under the age of 18. The Tobacco Products Bill 2001 prescribes jail sentences of up to three months to those who sell tobacco to children. It also requires companies to print the tar and nicotine content on the packaging. SPORTS SPONSORSHIP In 2001, India's national cricket team secured a sponsor for the team. The global sports management firm, Trans World International (TWI), will pay the Indian cricket board about $218,000 for a three year period. The previous sponsor, the Indian Tobacco Company (ITC), was forced to withdraw its sponsorship after government legislation banned sports funding by cigarette companies. |
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HISTORY OF TOBACCO IN INDIA Tobacco was first brought to India by Portuguese merchants 400 years ago. Although there were already some strains of locally-grown tobacco in India these were outclassed by the new imported varieties from Brazil. The trade boomed and tobacco quickly established itself as the most important commodity passing through Goa in the 17th century. Virtually every household in the Portuguese colony took up the new fashion of smoking or chewing tobacco. Later on the British introduced modern commercially-produced cigarettes. |
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