Big Tobacco battles to limit smoking
laws in poorer nations
Tobacco companies are
resisting the move in low- and middle-income countries to tackle one of the
gravest health threats facing them: smoking. Tobacco use is increasing
overseas, especially in China and Africa.
Tobacco companies are
pushing back against a worldwide rise in antismoking laws, using a
little-noticed legal strategy to delay or block regulation. The industry is
warning countries that their tobacco laws violate an expanding web of trade and
investment treaties, raising the prospect of costly, prolonged legal battles,
health advocates and officials said.
The strategy has
gained momentum in recent years as smoking rates in rich countries have fallen
and tobacco companies have sought to maintain access to fast-growing markets in
developing countries. Industry officials say that there are only a few cases of
active litigation, and that giving a legal opinion to governments is routine
for major players whose interests will be affected.
But tobacco opponents
say the strategy is intimidating low- and middle-income countries from tackling
one of the gravest health threats facing them: smoking. They also say the legal
tactics are undermining the world’s largest global public health treaty, the W.H.O. Framework Convention on Tobacco Control, which
aims to reduce smoking by encouraging limits on advertising, packaging and sale
of tobacco products. More than 170 countries have signed it since it took
effect in 2005.
More than five million
people die annually of smoking-related causes, more than from AIDS, malaria and
tuberculosis combined,according to the World Health
Organization.
Alarmed about rising
smoking rates among young women, Namibia, in southern Africa, passed a tobacco
control law in 2010 but quickly found itself bombarded with stern warnings from
the tobacco industry that the new statute violated the country’s obligations
under trade treaties.
“We have bundles and
bundles of letters from them,” said Namibia’s health minister, Dr. Richard
Kamwi.
Three years later, the
government, fearful of a punishingly expensive legal battle, has yet to carry
out a single major provision of the law, like limiting advertising or placing
large health warnings on cigarette packaging.
The issue is
particularly urgent now as the United States completes talks on a major new
trade treaty with 11 Pacific Rim countries that aims to be a model for the
rules of international commerce. Administration officials say they want the new
treaty to raise standards for public health. They single out tobacco as a health concern, wording that upset the U.
S. Chamber of Commerce, which said that the inclusion would leave the door open
for other products, like soda or sugar, to be heavily regulated in other
countries.
“Our goal in this
agreement is to protect the legitimate health regulations that treaty countries
want to pursue from efforts by tobacco companies to undermine them,” said
Michael Froman, the United States trade representative, in a telephone
interview. The language is not yet final, he said.
But public health
advocates say the current wording would not stop countries from being sued when
they adopt strong tobacco control measures, though some trade experts said it
might make the companies less likely to win. This fall, more than 50 members of
the House and about a dozen members of the Senate sent letters to the
administration expressing concern.
Tobacco consumption
more than doubled in the developing world from 1970 to 2000, according to the United Nations. Much of the increase was
in China, but there has also been substantial growth in Africa, where
smoking rates have traditionally been low. More than three-quarters of the
world’s smokers now live in the developing world.
Dr. Margaret Chan,
director general of the W.H.O., said in a speech last year that legal actions against Uruguay, Norway and Australia were
“deliberately designed to instill fear” in countries trying to reduce smoking.
“The wolf is no longer
in sheep’s clothing, and its teeth are bared,” she said.
Tobacco companies are
objecting to laws in both developed and developing nations. Industry officials
say they respect countries’ efforts to protect public health, but face
difficulties promoting their brands as more countries ban cigarette ads. Often,
the only space left is the packaging, and even that is shrinking, with some
countries requiring that packages be plastered with shocking pictures of people
with cancer; in Australia, brand names are reduced to uniform block letters on
drab olive backgrounds.
“Removing our
trademarks removes our assurance to customers of the origin and quality of our
lawfully available products, meaning they and their characteristics become
indistinguishable from those of our competitors,” said Gareth Cooper, group
head of regulation at British American Tobacco.
In the early 1990s,
the American government used to pressure countries to open their markets to
American tobacco companies. As smoking rates in some of these countries rose,
outrage grew, and President Bill Clinton issued an executive order in 2001 that
banned the United States government from lobbying on the industry’s behalf.
But other types of
trade agreements have emerged that give companies rights.
Such treaties are
intended to promote prosperity by reducing trade barriers and protecting
investors from expropriation by foreign governments. They allow companies to
sue directly, instead of having to persuade a state to take up their case. They
have proliferated since the 1990s, and number around 3,000, up from a few
hundred in the late 1980s, according to Robert Stumberg, a law professor at the
Harrison Institute for Public Law at Georgetown University, whose clients
include antismoking groups.
In Africa, at least
four countries — Namibia, Gabon, Togo and Uganda — have received warnings from
the tobacco industry that their laws run afoul of international treaties, said
Patricia Lambert, director of the international legal consortium at the
Campaign for Tobacco Free Kids.
“They’re trying to
intimidate everybody,” said Jonathan Liberman, director of the McCabe Center
for Law and Cancer in Australia, which gives legal support to countries that
have been challenged by tobacco companies. In Namibia, the tobacco industry has
said that requiring large warning labels on cigarette packages violates its
intellectual property rights and could fuel counterfeiting.
Mr. Cooper, of British
American Tobacco, whose local affiliate sent the government a legal opinion,
said in an email that countries should “consider the broader context of
implementing regulations that can impact trade.”
Thomas Bollyky, a
trade lawyer and a fellow at the Council on Foreign Relations, said many
developing countries are at a disadvantage in investment cases because they do
not have the specialized legal expertise or resources to fight.
Uruguay has acknowledged that it would have had to drop its tobacco
control law and settle with Philip Morris International if the foundation of
the departing mayor of New York, Michael R. Bloomberg, had not paid to defend
the law. (The company’s net revenue last year was $77 billion, substantially
more than Uruguay’s gross domestic product.) Even developed countries like
Canada and New Zealand have backed away from planned tobacco laws in the face
of investment treaty claims, Mr. Bollyky said.
The most closely
watched legal battle is playing out in Australia, where the tobacco industry
lost a case in domestic courts last year. Philip Morris International has filed
suit under an investment treaty between Australia and Hong Kong, where the firm
has a branch. The proceedings, which are not public, will be held in Singapore
and decided by outside arbitrators, not judges.
Philip Morris
International has dozens of subsidiaries, allowing the company “to play the
treaty game much more adroitly,” Professor Stumberg said.
Companies are even
paying for countries to make the industry’s case against other nations in the
World Trade Organization. Ukraine filed a complaint with the organization
against Australia’s packaging rule, even though the two countries barely trade.
Mr. Cooper acknowledged that his company was helping Ukraine pay the legal
bills, but said that was standard practice in W.T.O. disputes.
Bashupi Maloboka, a
Health Ministry official who steered the tobacco control law to passage in
Namibia, said the industry’s approach had slowed what was already a plodding
process.
“The fear is that they
have the money and they have the resources, so they can pay for anything,” said
Mr. Maloboka, who retired last year.
But Dr. Kamwi, the
health minister, said he hoped the regulations to put the 2010 law into
practice would be finished next year. “We have decided to put our foot down,”
he said. “If they want to go to court, we will see them there.”

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