China’s ministry in charge of tobacco control had ties to the tobacco industry. Not anymore
Move to shift responsibility from industry ministry to new agency will free the campaign ‘from the shackles of tobacco industry interests’
China is hoping that a change to its government structure will help the campaign to get some of the country’s 350 million smokers to quit the habit.
As part of a sweeping reshuffle, a new health commission will take over from the industry ministry as the government body responsible for tobacco control, implementing a set of international rules from the World Health Organisation.
Beijing signed the Framework Convention on Tobacco Control in 2003 and it took effect in China in 2006. But compliance has been limited, and China is still a bad example on smoking more than a decade after Beijing decided to implement the rules.
China is the world’s largest producer and consumer of tobacco. About one in every three of the world’s smokers lives in China, and they use about 44 per cent of the tobacco manufactured globally, according to WHO data.