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According to the World Health Organization, tobacco-related
disease will kill 8.3 million people by 2030. The international health experts
warned on Monday that tighter laws on the tobacco industry could save 200
million lives by 2050
"The only two epidemics that are encountering a major
increase in the next 20 years are the tobacco epidemic and the HIV/AIDS
epidemics," said Douglas Bettcher, director of the World Health
Organization's Tobacco Free Initiative.
WHO estimates that currently 5.4 million people die each
year because of tobacco-related diseases, with 50 per cent of them in Asia.
"Tobacco is a defective product. It kills half of its
customers," Bettcher added. "It kills 5.4 million people per year and
half of those deaths are in developing countries. That's like one jumbo jet
going down every hour," he said.
The announcement was made during an international conference
hosted by the Thai government in Bangkok
to draw up a masterplan for the world to kick the habit. WHO has demanded for
better implementation of the international Framework Convention on Tobacco
Control of the World Health Organization.
Last year around 600 billion cigarettes were smuggled - 11
per cent of the world's consumption - according to the Framework Convention
Alliance (FAC), which costs governments an estimated 40 to 50 million dollars
in lost tax revenues last year.
Bettcher said that if governments will introduce more
aggressive measures against smoking such as higher taxes, banning cigarette
advertising and making offices and public places totally tobacco-free, the
smoking rates could halve by 2050.
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