Packaging of cigarettes is a subject of controversy between cigarette makers, governments, and law-makers across the world. In their zeal to protect consumers from the indisputably harmful effects of smoking, governments have imposed increasingly tougher restrictions on brand advertising through the cigarette pack, and mandated the placement of graphics that detail the health hazards in horrific detail, such as a hole in the neck, mouth ulcers, and damaged lungs.
Tobacco companies have been challenging these measures in courts, considering the adverse effect on their businesses. Interestingly, courts have differed in their pronouncements in these cases. In Australia, the country’s High Court attracted worldwide attention when it recently set aside a challenge by tobacco companies to the government’s “plain packaging” legislation, which bans the use of brand logos from cigarette packs, and instead makes it compulsory to display graphics such as those mentioned above.
Claiming that the law impinged on their intellectual property rights, tobacco giants British American Tobacco PLC (NYSEAMEX:BTI) (LON:BATS), Britain’s Imperial Tobacco, Philip Morris International Inc. (NYSE:PM), and Japan Tobacco Inc (TYO:2914) had challenged its constitutional validity in the Australian High Court. Though the full judgment is awaited, the High Court opined by a majority out of seven judges, that the laws did not violate Australia’s constitution, effectively clearing the tables for the law to take effect from December 1 – cigarette packs and tobacco products will thereafter be sold only in plain olive green packs sans branding logos, and must display warnings of the hazards to health and graphics thereof.
This historic judgment was followed by action in Australian state, Tasmania’s legislature, which unanimously voted to ban the sale of tobacco products to any person born after 2000, as reported by the NYT. The proposal was introduced in the legislature by MP Ivan Dean, who said, “This would mean that we would have a generation of people not exposed to tobacco products.”
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