Cigarette firms lose appeal on UK packs
TOBACCO giants have lost a legal challenge in London against imposing new rules for standardized packaging due to come into force today, meaning Britain will join a growing list of countries to do so.
Philip Morris International, British American Tobacco, Imperial Tobacco and Japan Tobacco International had challenged the legality of the new regulations, which mean all new cigarette packs sold in Britain will have to be olive green.
Shops will have 12 months to sell existing packets.
“The regulations were lawful when they were promulgated by parliament and they are lawful now in the light of the most up-to-date evidence,” judge Nicholas Green said in yesterday’s ruling.
Cancer Research UK’s Chief Executive Harpal Kumar said: “This is an important milestone in our efforts to reduce the devastating toll that tobacco exerts on so many families every day.
“It’s the beginning of the end for packaging that masks a deadly and addictive product,” he said.
The European Court of Justice earlier this month ruled that the Tobacco Product Directive is lawful.
Under the directive, health warnings must cover 65 percent of the front and back of every pack of cigarettes, with extra warnings on the top.
The directive also allowed Britain to go further and introduce its own regulations requiring all packaging to be olive green.
A British health ministry spokesman said: “Smoking ... kills over 100,000 people every year in the UK.”
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