| WHO
stops hiring smokers
By SAM CAGE,
The Associated Press, Friday, December 2, 2005; 9:54 PM
GENEVA -- The World Health Organization has stopped hiring smokers
as part of its commitment to controlling tobacco use, a spokesman
said Friday.
"WHO has taken a very public lead in the fight against tobacco
use," spokesman Iain Simpson said. "As a matter of principle,
WHO does not want to recruit smokers."
As of Dec. 1, all vacancy notices include a line stating that the
U.N. health agency does not promote tobacco use or recruit smokers,
Simpson said. Applicants are asked if they smoke or use other tobacco
products, and if they answer "yes," the application process
is terminated.
According to an internal WHO memo, a copy of which was obtained
by The Associated Press, there is no penalization of serving staff
who use tobacco, but they cannot smoke on the agency's premises.
Designated outdoor areas where smoking is tolerated will remain
until further notice.
The Geneva-based agency encourages staff who smoke or use tobacco
to quit, and has several measures in place to help, the memo said.
"Tobacco use is the major preventable cause of death in the
world, killing nearly 5 million people annually. Tobacco use is
addictive," it said.
The ban on recruitment of smokers is legal under international
law, which governs operations at WHO and other U.N. agencies regardless
of location, Simpson explained. The ban, therefore, applies across
all the agency's sites, including offices in New York, he said.
When asked whether WHO would soon stop hiring obese people or those
drinking alcohol, spokeswoman Fadela Chaib said the agency was aware
that its new rules "may seem discriminatory or even politically
incorrect" to some. But she stressed that WHO needs to align
its own employment practices with its principles.
"WHO tries to encourage people to try and lead a healthy life.
There is safe sex, one can drink alcohol in a reasonable way and
one can attempt eating in a balanced fashion," Chaib said.
"But with tobacco, there is no middle ground, it is black and
white and it kills half of those consuming it."
WHO chief Lee Jong-wook wrote a letter to U.N. Secretary-General
Kofi Annan asking him to consider whether all United Nations agencies
and offices should be made smoke-free areas, Chaib said.
At the moment, each U.N. agency has its own separate policy on
smoking. Kiosks at the main United Nations building in Geneva continue
to sell tobacco.
___
Associated Press Writer Uta Harnischfeger contributed to this report.
Click
here for another story on this subject
-----------------------------------------------
Click
here to go back
Please
use your browser's back button to return to the previous page, or
go directly to the SmokeFreeSociety.org Home
Page.
|