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THE NEWS
For your information
Cuba
launches smoking ban
Monday, February 7, 2005
HAVANA, Cuba (AP) -- Cuba banned smoking in public
places on Monday, as the government of the country known for its
famous cigars acknowledged the health risk of tobacco.
Smoking will be banned in restaurants, except in
designated smoking areas, and cigarette machines also will be removed.
The law will also suspend sales of cigarettes to children under
age 16 and at stores less than 100 yards from schools.
According to government statistics, four of every
10 Cubans smoke, and 30 percent of the 15,000 deaths from preventable
cancers each year can be linked to smoking.
News of the ban was first announced last month,
when it was published in Cuba's National Gazette by the Commerce
Ministry.
The resolution said the move was "taking into
account the damage to human health caused by the consumption of
cigarettes and cigars, with the objective of contributing to a change
in the attitudes of our population."
But some Cubans didn't seem to know, or care, and
continued to light up their black tobacco cigarettes in enclosed
areas now designated as nonsmoking.
"I won't give you my name," a woman worker
in an office building in Old Havana said as she stubbed out her
filterless cigarette in a hallway ashtray by the elevator.
Cigar exports continue to play a key economic role,
generating $200 million annually.
Cuban President Fidel Castro, who gave up smoking
years ago, once joked about giving away boxes of cigars, saying
"the best thing to do is give them to your enemy."
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