Australia’s Highest Court Upholds Landmark Law Requiring Plain Cigarette Packaging
Wednesday, September 12, 2012
Posted by: Natalia Gromov
For Immediate Release: August
14, 2012
Contact: Marina
Carter, 202-296-5469
Australia’s Highest Court Upholds Landmark Law Requiring Plain
Cigarette Packaging
Statement of Matthew L. Myers
President, Campaign for Tobacco-Free Kids
WASHINGTON, DC – Delivering a tremendous victory for health,
Australia’s highest court has rejected a challenge by the tobacco industry and
upheld the world’s first law requiring that all cigarettes and other tobacco
products be sold in plain packaging, free of colorful logos and other
branding. We applaud the Australian government for standing up to the
bullying of the tobacco industry and taking strong and innovative action to
reduce tobacco use, the world’s number one cause of preventable death.
The plain packaging law, which was enacted last year, will save lives and stop
tobacco companies from using their packs to make cigarettes appealing to
kids. The plain packages will be required starting December 1.
Now that Australia’s plain packaging law has been enacted by its
Parliament and upheld by its courts, the United States and other nations must
stand with Australia and reject tobacco industry efforts to challenge the law
as a violation of international trade and investment agreements. Trade agreements
should not be used to undermine the legitimate efforts of any country to
protect public health and reduce the death and disease caused by tobacco
use. Philip Morris International has challenged the plain packaging law
as a violation of an Australia-Hong Kong bilateral investment agreement. Trade
complaints against the law have also been filed in the World Trade Organization.
Tobacco companies increasingly have abused trade and investment
agreements to challenge tobacco control measures around the world, including
measures enacted by the U.S. and Uruguay in addition to Australia. The
U.S. and other countries must reject such efforts. Tobacco companies must
not be allowed to bully and intimidate countries against taking actions that
protect public health. It is time for the global trading system to
recognize that tobacco is the world’s number one cause of preventable death, and
there is a global consensus that governments should be doing everything
possible to reduce, not increase, consumption of tobacco products and the harm
they cause.
We applaud Australian Prime Minister Julia Gillard,
Attorney-General (and former Health Minister) Nicola Roxon and the members of
Parliament who supported the plain packaging law for standing up to the tobacco
industry and putting public health first.
Based in Washington, DC, the Campaign for
Tobacco-Free Kids is a leading force in the fight to reduce tobacco use and its
deadly toll in the United States and around the world. Our vision: A future
free of the death and disease caused by tobacco. We work to save lives by
advocating for public policies that prevent kids from smoking, help smokers
quit and protect everyone from secondhand smoke.
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