Tag: Smoking Ban

  • Expansion Of Smoking Ban Along Tanglin Road And Dhoby Ghaut

    Expansion Of Smoking Ban Along Tanglin Road And Dhoby Ghaut

    From July 2018, as the Orchard Road belt will be transformed into a smoke-free zone. For the first three months after the smoking ban is enforced, those caught smoking in the smoke-free zone will receive verbal warnings, and those who ignore the warnings may be issued a fine. From October next year, enforcement action will be taken against offenders who smoke in public areas within the smoke-free zone, other than DSAs.

    Smoking at Orchard Road will only be allowed at designated smoking areas (DSAs), and there are currently five of them in the area:

    • Behind Somerset MRT Station
    • Cuppage Terrace
    • Far East Plaza
    • Orchard Towers
    • The Heeren

     

    Source: Channel News Asia

  • Cigarette Smuggler Skirts Deadly Edge Of IS Smoking Ban

    Cigarette Smuggler Skirts Deadly Edge Of IS Smoking Ban

    ESKI MOSUL (Iraq) — It was a heart-racing moment. The cigarette smuggler was stuck in line at a checkpoint as, up ahead, Islamic State militants were searching cars. He was running a big risk: The militants have banned smoking and lighting up is punishable with a fine or broken finger. Selling cigarettes can be a death sentence.

    Mr Falah Abdullah Jamil, 30, relied on his quick wits and silver tongue.

    When the fighters came to his vehicle at the checkpoint leading to his home village of Eski Mosul in northern Iraq, they asked what he had in his trunk

    “Nothing,” he lied.

    They popped open the trunk and found the 125 cartons of cigarettes he’d brought from Rabia, a town near the border with Syria.

    “I swear, it’s out of hunger,” he said he pleaded with the men. The father of six told them he was the only breadwinner for his extended family and was helping his neighbours as well.

    The fighters took him to the checkpoint commander, who warned Mr Jamil he’d go to prison and his car would be confiscated. Mr Jamil promised never to do it again. “Just let me go this time for the sake of my children,” he said. “If I don’t have money, what can I do? Should I steal? If I steal, you’ll cut off my hand.”

    In an interview with The Associated Press in May, Mr Jamil sat in his modest living room, describing how he survived nearly seven months of IS rule before the extremist group was run from town by Kurdish fighters.

    The checkpoint commander ordered his subordinates out of the room, Mr Jamil recalled. Once they were alone, he made his offer: “I will let you go if you give me cigarettes.” Mr Jamil asked him what brand. “Anything, just give me two cartons,” the commander replied.

    The commander “said he hadn’t had a smoke for three days so when he saw the cigarettes, he was very happy,” Mr Jamil said with a laugh.

    Iraqi civilians living under IS rule in Mosul, the group’s biggest stronghold, told the AP that the militants actually control the cigarette black market, banning smoking in public while privately controlling the sale of cigarettes at an inflated price. They spoke anonymously for fear of retribution.

    Mr Saad Eidou, 25, a displaced Iraqi from the town of Sinjar near the Syrian border, said that like everyone else, militants smoke in private. The cigarettes come in through Syria, where movement in and out of Turkey and non-IS areas is easier.

    “They brought in cigarettes from Syria, where you probably won’t pay more than 250 dinars (S$0.30) for a pack, but they were selling it here for 1,000 dinars,” said Mr Bilal Abdullah, another resident of Eski Mosul. With IS gone, he took deep draws from a cigarette in public as he spoke.

    In another incident, Mr Jamil said, he was accused of selling cigarettes by a member of the Hisba, the vice patrol that ruthlessly enforces the group’s regulations. Mr Jamil denied it profusely: “I told him, yes, I used to, but I stopped selling. I told him no one sells anymore since you have forbidden it.”

    The Hisba official asked if any cigarettes were in Mr Jamil’s house. Mr Jamil said no.

    “He said, ‘I will go and inspect your house, and if I find one pack of cigarettes I will execute you.’”

    Mr Jamil’s bluff had just gotten more dangerous. He had 1,600 cartons of cigarettes hidden at home, he said with a wicked smile.

    But he stuck by his story. “I told him, ‘Go ahead, I haven’t got anything.”

    Apparently convinced, the Hisba official had him sign a document vowing to never sell cigarettes or risk execution.

    “I signed it — but I sold again. I didn’t stop,” Mr Jamil said. “We had no flour, no rice, no food. I have children, and it was winter and was cold and there was no oil, no gas. … We were living a hellish tragedy.”

     

    Source: www.todayonline.com

  • Smoking Ban In More Locations Likely

    Smoking Ban In More Locations Likely

    SINGAPORE: Smoking could be banned in more locations in the near future if a consultation held on Saturday (Apr 18) between the Government and some stakeholders is any indication.

    Second Minister for the Environment and Water Resources Grace Fu said the Government is mulling over its “next steps” even as it eventually moves toward a smoke-free Singapore. However, she said policies must be balanced between smoking’s impact on non-smokers and accommodating the needs of smokers.

    Besides most indoor public areas, the smoking ban was extended in 2013 to include void decks, covered walkways and a five-metre radius of bus stops.

    Last year, Nee Soon South constituency piloted smoke-free zones, where smokers were urged to light up in six designated areas only.

    The smoking points have also led to less littering.

    The Singapore Management University (SMU) was one of more than 20 stakeholders at Saturday’s consultation session which included non-governmental organisations, healthcare professionals, and current and former smokers.

    Many are advocates of designated smoking points although some suggested these should also be enclosed.

    “We had suggestions of people putting up partitions – not just a line, because the smoke will just encroach into other areas,” said Peter Ong, a smoker and vice chairman of the Tai Seng Gardens Neighbourhood Committee.

    Others have proposed banning smoking for those born after year 2000.

    Dr Koong Heng Nung, senior consultant surgeon at Mount Elizabeth Novena Hospital, said: “Smoking cessation programmes’ success rates have never been high. Even my patients diagnosed with lung cancer find it a challenge to stop smoking.

    “The idea here is to restrict the use of tobacco for a certain birth year onwards – phasing it in because we’re not restricting current smokers. It does not disenfranchise current smokers, and yet we’re setting a new social norm to a new generation of non-smokers.”

    The Government’s policy so far has been to point out where the public cannot smoke. But views aired confirmed this could create confusion among smokers and non-smokers alike.

    The Government is now deciding if it should focus on regulations that state where people can smoke.

    Ms Fu said: “First of all, there need to be rules – clear rules so that people understand where certain behaviour is allowed and where smoking is not allowed.

    “And for many of the responsible smokers, those will be very helpful. They would like to abide by the rules and they would like to know what is the right thing to do. If they do not have clear rules, they can’t do the right thing. Just having clear signs, designations, that would be helpful.”

    Ms Fu said enforcement also needs to be kept up on the minority who flout the rules.

     
    Source: www.channelnewsasia.com