British American Tobacco (BAT) Malaysia has announced a new price increase for its cigarette brands effective today.
The new price for a pack of 20 cigarettes for Dunhill, Kent and Benson & Hedges will now cost RM12 each.
Pall Mall and Lucky Strike Plains will cost RM12.50 and Pall Mall and Peter Stuyvesant will cost RM10.50.
The last price increase for BAT cigarette brands was in June.
Meanwhile, a taxation expert said excise tax hikes needed to be
implemented gradually to avoid destabilising the legal cigarette market.
International Tax and Investment Centre president Daniel A. Witt said
an increase that was too high implemented over too short a term could
shock the market and create a demand for black market goods.
“Increasing excise tax should be done in a predictable way to stabilise
the legal market, meaning those who can be taxed,” said Witt, who
presented the “Asia-11: Illicit Tobacco Indicator 2012” study to the
media yesterday.
Asia-11 is a report on the illicit cigarette trade among 11 countries in 2012.
He was speaking on the recent increase of tobacco excise tax of 14% that was gazetted by the Government last Friday.
Witt said illicit cigarette trade had increased by 40% in the past
eight years, caused by the steady increase of tobacco excise tax to its
current level of 48%.
The report also stated that the Government
lost an estimated RM1.9bil in taxes last year and had the third highest
consumption levels of illicit cigarettes among the countries surveyed.
Meanwhile, Netizens and observers said the price increase would make no difference to smokers here.
Facebook user Benjamin Azad said while it was easy to blame tobacco products for health issues, it was unfair to do so.
“Why is no one taking action against fast food, processed meats,
carbonated drinks or even the cooking oil used in restaurants? This is
an unfair judgment,” he said.
Steven Lee said trying to curb
smoking by increasing the price was pointless as it would “just drive
smokers to smoke smuggled cigarettes.”
Chief activist of
Malaysian Islamic Consumers Association Datuk Nazmi Johan said the price
increase, while good, wouldn’t do much to stop people from smoking.
Cigarette online prices. We present you the best brands to help you in finding the right cigarette brand for your personality.
Friday, November 29, 2013
Friday, November 15, 2013
Exhibition, Film about Landmark Smoking Report Featured at UA
“The Surgeon General vs. The Marlboro Man: Who Really Won?” That’s
the provocative question posed by an original exhibition at The
University of Alabama’s Gorgas Library to commemorate the
50th anniversary of the publication of the landmark 1964 U.S. Surgeon
General’s Report on Smoking and Health.
On Nov. 20, a reception will be held in conjunction with the exhibition to honor the memory of Dr. Luther Terry, an Alabamian who was the country’s Surgeon General when the 1964 report was released.
Honored guests at the reception will include: Celia Wallace, chair of the Mobile-based Springhill Hospital board of directors and wife of the late Dr. Gerald Wallace; Terry’s son, Michael Terry, a Memphis businessman; Dr. Robert Robinson, former associate director of the Office on Smoking and Health at the U.S. Centers for Disease Control and Prevention; and Donald Shopland, a staff member to the advisory committee that wrote the 1964 report on smoking and health.
The reception will feature the premier screening of the short documentary “Blowing Smoke: The Lost Legacy of the Surgeon General’s Report,” by exhibit curator Dr. Alan Blum, the Gerald Leon Wallace MD Endowed Chair in Family Medicine at UA’s College of Community Health Sciences; his son, Samuel Blum; and UA alumnus Jake Buettner.
“The 50th anniversary of the report is not a celebration, but rather a sobering reminder of missed opportunities to curb the nation’s number one avoidable cause of cancer, heart disease, emphysema and high health care costs,” said Blum, one of the nation’s foremost authorities on the tobacco industry and the anti-smoking movement and director of the University’s Center for the Study of Tobacco and Society, which he founded in 1998.
Following the film, an open discussion to consider future efforts to counter smoking and its promotion will include remarks from Dr. Richard Streiffer, dean of UA’s College of Community Health Sciences; Dr. Rebecca Kelly, director of UA’s Office of Health Promotion and Wellness; Fayetta Royal, a tri-county tobacco control officer for the Alabama Department of Public Health; and Zac McMillian, a UA pre-medical student working for a smoke-free campus.
The exhibition, reception and film premier, together titled “Exhibition, Film Commemorate Landmark Surgeon General’s Report on Smoking,” will be held from 4:30 to 6:30 p.m. in the Amelia Gayle Gorgas Library Pearce Foyer and adjacent room 205 (second floor).
Through more than 130 artifacts, from packages of candy cigarettes that look like real ones to copies of medical journals with physicians endorsing various cigarette brands, the exhibition traces the promotion of smoking in America throughout the past century. Highlighting the exhibition, which will be shown at the Gorgas Library through Dec. 1, is a copy of the Surgeon General’s report, as well as headlines from the front pages of six newspapers the day the report was released.
From the 1920s through the 1960s, actors, actresses and athletes were models in cigarette advertisements. Baseball greats Joe Dimaggio and Lou Gherig were quoted in the ads in the Sunday newspaper comic pages saying, “Camels don’t get my wind,” and “I can smoke as many as I please.” Even Jackie Robison promoted Chesterfield, “The baseball man’s cigarette.”
Blum said for most of the 20th century, the tobacco industry claimed that reports of smoking and disease had been based on statistical associations and not biological and pathological evidence; meanwhile, the industry’s own researchers were acknowledging that smoking caused cancer.
On January 11, 1964, at a packed press conference in the U.S. State Department in Washington, D.C., Surgeon General Luther Terry released what would become one of the most important documents in the history of medicine. The report was the culmination of a year-long analysis of the world’s literature on smoking by a 10-member scientific advisory committee that also included Dr. Charles LeMaistre, a distinguished UA alumnus. The committee’s conclusions: “Cigarette smoking is causally related to lung cancer in men … and is a health hazard of sufficient importance to warrant appropriate remedial action.”
“Yet, even after the Surgeon General’s Report was published, cigarette manufacturers continued to deny the evidence and sought to allay public anxiety by assuring that new filtered, low-tar, light and ultra-light brands were not harmful,” Blum said.
The exhibition illustrates how cigarette maker Philip Morris ingeniously associated smoking with the women’s liberation movement beginning in the late 1960s with the launch of its Virginia Slims brand, along with TV and the print advertising containing the slogan, “You’ve come a long way, Baby.” For nearly 25 years, telecasts of the Virginia Slims Women’s Tennis Circuit circumvented the 1971 Congressional ban on cigarette advertising on television. By 1985, lung cancer had surpassed breast cancer deaths among U.S. women, while women’s magazines continued to accept cigarette advertising.
“One part of the exhibition highlights the way in which magazines such as Time, Newsweek, Ebony, Rolling Stone, Ms., and others played down the risks of smoking—even in stories about cancer and heart disease—so as not to displease their cigarette advertisers,” Blum says.
The exhibition concludes with the reminder that “Fifty years after the Surgeon General’s landmark report, the heath and economic toll taken by smoking remains devastating.”
“Surgeon General Terry’s indictment of cigarettes in 1964 might have been expected to mark the beginning of the end of the Marlboro man,” Blum said. “But far from riding off into the sunset, the tobacco industry is riding high in the saddle, while maintaining the nicotine addiction of nearly 50 million Americans. The tragic result is that cigarette smoking is still the nation’s No. 1 avoidable health problem, accounting for 440,000 deaths a year, including 7,600 in Alabama — more than the annual deaths from AIDS, illegal drugs, alcohol, motor vehicle accidents, homicides and suicides combined.”
UA’s Center for the Study of Tobacco and Society holds Blum’s vast ethnographic collection of more than 100,000 original items related to tobacco — including more than 3,000 books and pamphlets, several thousand cigarette ads and promotional items, 1,300 editorial cartoons, thousands of original photographs and memorabilia from tobacco-sponsored sports and cultural events, and 2,000 videotapes, DVDs and audio recordings of tobacco-related news stories, cigarette commercials and documentaries.
In 1977, Blum founded Doctors Ought to Care, the first physicians’ organization dedicated to ending the tobacco pandemic. As editor of the Medical Journal of Australia and the New York State Journal of Medicine in the 1980s, he published the first theme issues on tobacco of any journal. He was awarded the Surgeon General’s Medallion by former U.S. Surgeon General Dr. C. Everett Koop, and, in 2006, received an honorary doctor of science from Amherst College for his efforts to end the tobacco pandemic.
The current exhibition is Blum’s 10th on tobacco-related subjects since 1988. “Cartoonists Take Up Smoking,” which looked at the battles over smoking during the last 50 years as seen through the eyes of the nation’s editorial cartoonists, was on view at the National Museum of Health and Medicine in Washington, D.C., as well as at 12 other venues in the United States. “Up in Smoke,” the history of the airline flight attendants’ struggle to end smoking on airlines, was hosted by the Louis A. Turpen Museum of Aviation at the San Francisco International Airport and two other airports.
Accompanying the current exhibition at Gorgas Library are three banners with a timeline of the history of tobacco. The banners were co-curated by Blum with the Texas Medical Association in 2010 for an exhibition, “Smoke and Mirrors,” at the TMA’s medical museum.
After Dec. 1, a version of the exhibition at UA will travel to the Lyndon Baines Presidential Library in Austin and the Texas Medical Center Library in Houston.
On Nov. 20, a reception will be held in conjunction with the exhibition to honor the memory of Dr. Luther Terry, an Alabamian who was the country’s Surgeon General when the 1964 report was released.
Honored guests at the reception will include: Celia Wallace, chair of the Mobile-based Springhill Hospital board of directors and wife of the late Dr. Gerald Wallace; Terry’s son, Michael Terry, a Memphis businessman; Dr. Robert Robinson, former associate director of the Office on Smoking and Health at the U.S. Centers for Disease Control and Prevention; and Donald Shopland, a staff member to the advisory committee that wrote the 1964 report on smoking and health.
The reception will feature the premier screening of the short documentary “Blowing Smoke: The Lost Legacy of the Surgeon General’s Report,” by exhibit curator Dr. Alan Blum, the Gerald Leon Wallace MD Endowed Chair in Family Medicine at UA’s College of Community Health Sciences; his son, Samuel Blum; and UA alumnus Jake Buettner.
“The 50th anniversary of the report is not a celebration, but rather a sobering reminder of missed opportunities to curb the nation’s number one avoidable cause of cancer, heart disease, emphysema and high health care costs,” said Blum, one of the nation’s foremost authorities on the tobacco industry and the anti-smoking movement and director of the University’s Center for the Study of Tobacco and Society, which he founded in 1998.
Following the film, an open discussion to consider future efforts to counter smoking and its promotion will include remarks from Dr. Richard Streiffer, dean of UA’s College of Community Health Sciences; Dr. Rebecca Kelly, director of UA’s Office of Health Promotion and Wellness; Fayetta Royal, a tri-county tobacco control officer for the Alabama Department of Public Health; and Zac McMillian, a UA pre-medical student working for a smoke-free campus.
The exhibition, reception and film premier, together titled “Exhibition, Film Commemorate Landmark Surgeon General’s Report on Smoking,” will be held from 4:30 to 6:30 p.m. in the Amelia Gayle Gorgas Library Pearce Foyer and adjacent room 205 (second floor).
Through more than 130 artifacts, from packages of candy cigarettes that look like real ones to copies of medical journals with physicians endorsing various cigarette brands, the exhibition traces the promotion of smoking in America throughout the past century. Highlighting the exhibition, which will be shown at the Gorgas Library through Dec. 1, is a copy of the Surgeon General’s report, as well as headlines from the front pages of six newspapers the day the report was released.
From the 1920s through the 1960s, actors, actresses and athletes were models in cigarette advertisements. Baseball greats Joe Dimaggio and Lou Gherig were quoted in the ads in the Sunday newspaper comic pages saying, “Camels don’t get my wind,” and “I can smoke as many as I please.” Even Jackie Robison promoted Chesterfield, “The baseball man’s cigarette.”
Blum said for most of the 20th century, the tobacco industry claimed that reports of smoking and disease had been based on statistical associations and not biological and pathological evidence; meanwhile, the industry’s own researchers were acknowledging that smoking caused cancer.
On January 11, 1964, at a packed press conference in the U.S. State Department in Washington, D.C., Surgeon General Luther Terry released what would become one of the most important documents in the history of medicine. The report was the culmination of a year-long analysis of the world’s literature on smoking by a 10-member scientific advisory committee that also included Dr. Charles LeMaistre, a distinguished UA alumnus. The committee’s conclusions: “Cigarette smoking is causally related to lung cancer in men … and is a health hazard of sufficient importance to warrant appropriate remedial action.”
“Yet, even after the Surgeon General’s Report was published, cigarette manufacturers continued to deny the evidence and sought to allay public anxiety by assuring that new filtered, low-tar, light and ultra-light brands were not harmful,” Blum said.
The exhibition illustrates how cigarette maker Philip Morris ingeniously associated smoking with the women’s liberation movement beginning in the late 1960s with the launch of its Virginia Slims brand, along with TV and the print advertising containing the slogan, “You’ve come a long way, Baby.” For nearly 25 years, telecasts of the Virginia Slims Women’s Tennis Circuit circumvented the 1971 Congressional ban on cigarette advertising on television. By 1985, lung cancer had surpassed breast cancer deaths among U.S. women, while women’s magazines continued to accept cigarette advertising.
“One part of the exhibition highlights the way in which magazines such as Time, Newsweek, Ebony, Rolling Stone, Ms., and others played down the risks of smoking—even in stories about cancer and heart disease—so as not to displease their cigarette advertisers,” Blum says.
The exhibition concludes with the reminder that “Fifty years after the Surgeon General’s landmark report, the heath and economic toll taken by smoking remains devastating.”
“Surgeon General Terry’s indictment of cigarettes in 1964 might have been expected to mark the beginning of the end of the Marlboro man,” Blum said. “But far from riding off into the sunset, the tobacco industry is riding high in the saddle, while maintaining the nicotine addiction of nearly 50 million Americans. The tragic result is that cigarette smoking is still the nation’s No. 1 avoidable health problem, accounting for 440,000 deaths a year, including 7,600 in Alabama — more than the annual deaths from AIDS, illegal drugs, alcohol, motor vehicle accidents, homicides and suicides combined.”
UA’s Center for the Study of Tobacco and Society holds Blum’s vast ethnographic collection of more than 100,000 original items related to tobacco — including more than 3,000 books and pamphlets, several thousand cigarette ads and promotional items, 1,300 editorial cartoons, thousands of original photographs and memorabilia from tobacco-sponsored sports and cultural events, and 2,000 videotapes, DVDs and audio recordings of tobacco-related news stories, cigarette commercials and documentaries.
In 1977, Blum founded Doctors Ought to Care, the first physicians’ organization dedicated to ending the tobacco pandemic. As editor of the Medical Journal of Australia and the New York State Journal of Medicine in the 1980s, he published the first theme issues on tobacco of any journal. He was awarded the Surgeon General’s Medallion by former U.S. Surgeon General Dr. C. Everett Koop, and, in 2006, received an honorary doctor of science from Amherst College for his efforts to end the tobacco pandemic.
The current exhibition is Blum’s 10th on tobacco-related subjects since 1988. “Cartoonists Take Up Smoking,” which looked at the battles over smoking during the last 50 years as seen through the eyes of the nation’s editorial cartoonists, was on view at the National Museum of Health and Medicine in Washington, D.C., as well as at 12 other venues in the United States. “Up in Smoke,” the history of the airline flight attendants’ struggle to end smoking on airlines, was hosted by the Louis A. Turpen Museum of Aviation at the San Francisco International Airport and two other airports.
Accompanying the current exhibition at Gorgas Library are three banners with a timeline of the history of tobacco. The banners were co-curated by Blum with the Texas Medical Association in 2010 for an exhibition, “Smoke and Mirrors,” at the TMA’s medical museum.
After Dec. 1, a version of the exhibition at UA will travel to the Lyndon Baines Presidential Library in Austin and the Texas Medical Center Library in Houston.
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