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THE NEWS
For your information
Smoking
ban set for England
Tuesday, November 16,
2004
LONDON, England --
England could become the latest country to ban smoking in public
places, including restaurants and most pubs and bars, under a government
proposal.
The ban would be phased
in gradually, starting with government offices by 2006, if it is
approved by lawmakers, Health Secretary John Reid told parliament
Tuesday.
"All government
departments will be smoke-free," Reid said. "All enclosed
public places and workplaces ... will be smoke free. All restaurants
will be smoke free. All pubs and bars preparing and serving food
will be smoke free."
Bars and pubs that
serve no food -- about 20 percent of England's drinking establishments,
Reid said -- would not be affected under the government policy White
Paper.
"This is a sensible
solution, I believe, which balances the protection of the majority
with the personal freedom of the minority in England," he said.
Last week, Scotland's
government announced it would seek to ban smoking in all enclosed
public places by 2006.
Earlier this year,
Ireland implemented a ban on smoking in all enclosed workplaces,
including restaurants and pubs, helping to bring the issue to the
forefront in Britain.
Shares in pub groups
and tobacco firms tumbled even before the official announcement,
Reuters reported.
Britain's biggest operator
of pubs, Enterprise Inns, was hardest hit. Its shares lost 3.8 percent
on fears the proposals will cost the company trade.
Shares in tobacco firms
Gallaher and Imperial Tobacco fell 2 percent, while pub operators
Mitchells & Butler, Punch Taverns and Wolverhampton & Dudley
Breweries slid over 3 percent.
The ban was expected
to disappoint many anti-smoking campaigners, who have said that
only a blanket ban across the whole of England can protect workers.
Leading medical experts,
including chief medical officer Dr. Liam Donaldson, have long called
for a total ban to protect non-smokers from the dangers of secondhand
smoke.
The government's wide-ranging,
200-page White Paper also targeted rising obesity, sexually transmitted
infections and alcohol abuse.
The government plans
to work with supermarkets and food manufacturers to introduce a
clear coding system for foods by 2006 so people can understand at
a glance what is healthy and what should be eaten only in moderation.
"We will develop
a simple code for processed food to indicate fat, sugar and salt
content for shoppers," Reid said.
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