Recently the Tobacco Institute of India has given awards to the
tobacco farmers on their achievements. I met some of the farmers who
attended the awards function , in casual chat one of the prospective
farmer mentioned that he doesn't know what FCTC (Framework Convention
on Tobacco Control) means until he attend the award ceremony. Most of
the tobacco growers don't know about the FCTC which was ratified by
Indian government in 5th February ,2004. The world Health Organization (
WHO) adopted the FCTC in May 2003 to reduce the tobacco consumption to
protect the global public health and this is one of the most quickly
ratified treaties in United Nations history. FCTC formulated the
policies for the member countries to adopt the better strategies for
tobacco control, those might be mandatory and some of them are
provisional.
India is so active in FCTC treaty and was
the one among the first signatory countries. Even prior to FCTC, India
has been working on tobacco control by several legislations like COTPA
(Cigarettes and Other Tobacco Products Act) i.e. ban on smoking in
public places, ban on underage sales, prohibiting the tobacco sales
within 100 yards of schools and hospitals and restrictions on tobacco
advertisements & sponsorships. Proactively our Union Health
Ministry proposed that all new films have to flash a static anti-tobacco
message during a smoking scene. The government initiatives are not
only with consumption part but also in production and distribution,
government is enforcing the heavy taxes to control the tobacco
consumption .The tax on tobacco products in India is are complex and
vary for tobacco products, cigarettes taxes are calculated by the length
and the process of manufacturing which accounts approximately 38% on
retails price and the Bidis (tobacco rolled in a leaf) are taxed very
low averaging 9% on retail price.
India is the third
largest producer and second largest group of smokers, over 120 millions
of Indians smoke which counts 10% of the total world's tobacco smokers
and over 250 million people across the country use tobacco products like
gutka, cigarettes , bidis and other kinds. Tobacco will be responsible
for 13% of all deaths in India, it counts around 900,000 deaths per
year. Worldwide, every 1 in 10 adult deaths are caused by tobacco and
it kills more than 5 million people per year. The World Health
Organization warned that if the same consumption patterns continue, more
than 8 million people will die per year by 2030. Everybody has the same
questions, why farmers are growing tobacco even that is harm for human
health and why governments are allowing tobacco cultivation even lot of
health organizations and social groups are advocating a ban on tobacco.
Tobacco cultivation is a part of Indian agriculture system, it is
legally cultivated agriculture crop and globally trading commodity.
Tobacco is the best cash crop among all cash crops… in terms of high
value returns and suitable to most environments, on top that it’s a
labor intensive crop which helps to improve the rural employment .Indian
Tobacco Industry is providing livelihood to more than 25 million people
in the country, the tobacco contribution to India’s GNP is about 10%.
Consuming
tobacco is a fatal addiction and social problem, it keeps the health in
hazard. The problem should be dealt with public awareness, anti smoking
campaigns by government and other advocacy groups have not much
influenced the tobacco farmers neither threaten to tobacco cultivation
nor encourage them to leave the crop. But the FCTC regulations are
simple forcing ban farmers from cultivating tobacco. Indian government
never consulted and asked the tobacco farmers' opinion before ratifying
the treaty in 2004, it's an autocratic decision. The Indian tobacco
farmers were not against to our national tobacco control law like COTPA
or any legislation which prohibits tobacco consumption, they do concern
about public health but imposing FCTC regulations on tobacco farmers
without consulting them is unacceptable, FCTC planned to force all the
governments to keep the tobacco farming industry in jeopardy. Indian
farmers are opposing several articles of the FCTC like 9 and 10 which
are dealt with regulation, testing, measuring and disclosure of
contents.
FCTC proposals will affect our
tobacco farmers and industry, more than 30 million of Indians livelihood
will be devastated. Especially in Andhra Pradesh and Karnataka, tobacco
growing is the main source of livelihood for farmers and moreover India
is the place where the tobacco grow year-around. AS per FCTC articles
17 and 18, the government should provide technical and financial aid
assistance for economical transition to all stake holders whose
livelihoods are seriously affected as a consequence of tobacco control
programs, but after so many research and field trials they identified
that it takes so many years. However, now the working group abandoned
its original mandate and came out with new set of recommendations like
restrict/stop all financial and technical support for tobacco farming;
mandate the seasons when tobacco can and cannot be grown; limit, then
reduce, the land area where tobacco can be grown, dismantling all
tobacco governing bodies and reduce tobacco production. These
irrational destructive proposals are going to be destroy the million
lives of tobacco dependents by not offering economically viable
alternative crops and livelihood.
I think the FCTC treaty is autocratic and
imposed one, because the veto powered nation- United States of America
haven't ratified the same and other large tobacco production countries
like Argentina, Zimbabwe, Malawi and Indonesia were never signed the
treaty. If India implements these guidelines, then non signed countries
may dump their tobacco products ,they will increase their production and
it may lead to contraband trading, then Indian tobacco farmers
livelihood will be in trouble and the Indian economy will go down i.e.
almost Rs.13,500 crore of excise revenue and Rs 4,160 crore of export
revenue. I am not against to tobacco control, government is spending
millions of tax payers' money towards public health and creating
awareness on tobacco consumption risks but I request our Indian
government to refuse these unreasonable, imposed FCTC proposals and
think in a pragmatic approach to help tobacco farmers for their smooth
economic livelihood transition.
Saturday, September 22, 2012
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