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English Edition Section Inside This: यस भित्रका खुराकहरु: संपादकीय Editorial साताको कुराकानी Interview साताको दोहोरी भाका साताको अनुहार साप्ताहिक झटारो हाम्रो बोली Feature Story / News स्थानीय खबरहरु Local News नेपालका खबरहरु News from Nepal अन्रांष्ट्रीय खबरहरु International News साताको अनुहार ![]() Faces of the Week Upcoming Events in USA न्यूयोर्कमा आगामी कायंक्रमहरु Upcoming Events in NYC न्यूयोर्क शहरमा एक साँझ An Evening Out in New York न्यूयोर्कका नेपाली संघ-संस्थाहरु Nepalese Orgs in NYC न्यूयोर्कमा नेपाली ब्यावसायहरु Nepalese Business in NYC अमेरिकामा नेपाली संस्थाहरु Nepalese Orgs in USA अमेरिकामा नेपाली ब्यावसायहरु Nepalese Business in USA समकालिन साहित्य-रचना Contemporary Writings कविता Poetry मनोरन्जन Entertainment दोहोरी लोक भाकाहरु सुनौं Nepalese Folk Music & Dance बगिंकृत विज्ञापन Classified पाठक प्रतिकृया Readers' Comments पुराना कुराहरु News Archive Audio Archive Video Archive बिबिध Miscellaneous नेपालका आदिवासी-जनजातिहरु Indigenous People of Nepal प्रवासी नेपाली संस्थाह्रू Nepali Diaspora Orgs Nepali News Media नेपाली पत्रपत्रिकाहरू दैनिक Daily साप्ताहिक Weekly Monthly & Other Media Nepali Online Portals Nepali Radio / F.M. / TV नेपाली अनलाइन् पोटंल |
News from New York: World No Tobacco Day, May 31 2008 |
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![]() Archive» Celebrate World No Tobacco Day, May 31 2008. Photos credits: See below for details. Illustration: eEyeCam Photos courtesy: Images from L to R: Coventry.gov.uk, MindSetFree.com, World Health Organization (who.int), ParentingWithoutTears.com and NoSmokingDay.org.uk. WHO Media Centre: WHO Wants Total Ban on Tobacco Advertising GENEVA, May 30, 2008- WHO today urged governments to protect the world’s 1.8 billion young people by imposing a ban on all tobacco advertising, promotion and sponsorship. The WHO's call to action comes on the eve of World No Tobacco Day, 31 May. This year’s campaign focuses on the multi-billion dollar efforts of tobacco companies to attract young people to its addictive products through sophisticated marketing. Recent studies prove that the more young people are exposed to tobacco advertising, the more likely they are to start smoking. Despite this, only 5% of the world’s population is covered by comprehensive bans on tobacco advertising, promotion and sponsorship. Tobacco companies, meanwhile, continue targeting young people by falsely associating use of tobacco products with qualities such as glamour, energy and sex appeal. "In order to survive, the tobacco industry needs to replace those who quit or die with new young consumers," said WHO Director-General Dr Margaret Chan. "It does this by creating a complex 'tobacco marketing net' that ensnares millions of young people worldwide, with potentially devastating health consequences." "A ban on all tobacco advertising, promotion and sponsorship is a powerful tool we can use to protect the world’s youth," the Director-General added. Since most people start smoking before the age of 18, and almost a quarter of those before the age of 10, tobacco companies market their products wherever youth can be easily accessed – in the movies, on the Internet, in fashion magazines and at music and sports venues. In a WHO study of 13 to 15-year-olds in schools worldwide, more than 55% of students reported seeing advertisements for cigarettes on billboards in the previous month, while 20% owned an item with logo of a cigarette brand on it. But it is the developing world, home to more than 80% of the world’s youth, which is most aggressively targeted by tobacco companies. Young women and girls are particularly at risk, with tobacco companies seeking to weaken cultural opposition to their products in countries where women have traditionally not used tobacco. "The tobacco industry employs predatory marketing strategies to get young people hooked to their addictive drug," said Dr Douglas Bettcher, Director of WHO’s Tobacco Free Initiative. "But comprehensive advertising bans do work, reducing tobacco consumption by up to 16% in countries that have already taken this legislative step." "Half measures are not enough," added Dr Bettcher. "When one form of advertising is banned, the tobacco industry simply shifts its vast resources to another channel. We urge governments to impose a complete ban to break the tobacco marketing net," he said. For further information contact: Alison Clements-Hunt Communications Officer Tobacco Free Initiative, WHO Telephone: +41 22 791 55 39 Mobile: +41 79475 5551 E-mail: clementshunta@who.int Stéfanie Laniel Communications Officer Tobacco Free Initiative, WHO Telephone:+ 41 22 791 1018 Mobile: +41 79 475 5524 E-mail: laniels@who.int This article originally appeared at: www.who.int/mediacentre/news/releases/2008/pr17/en/index.html |
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