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Putin tries to curb smoking in Russia
RUSSIAN President Vladimir Putin has signed a law that will ban smoking in most public places and restrict cigarette sales in the world's second-largest tobacco market after China.
The law will ban smoking in public places such as subways and schools from June 1, and come into force a year later in other places including restaurants and cafes.
It will also ban sales of tobacco products at street kiosks from June 1, 2014, restrict advertising and set minimum prices for cigarettes which now cost 50 to 60 roubles a pack (less than US$2).
Putin hopes the law will help undermine an entrenched cigarette culture and reverse a decline in Russia's population since the collapse of the Soviet Union.
Advocating the law in a video blog before it was submitted to parliament last year, Prime Minister Dmitry Medvedev said nearly one in three Russians were hooked on smoking, and almost 400,000 die each year from smoking-related causes.
The Kremlin said the law was intended to bring Russia into line with a World Health Organization tobacco control treaty that Moscow ratified in 2008.
The law faced opposition from foreign tobacco companies that dominate a cigarette market estimated to be worth US$22 billion in 2011 by Euromonitor International, a market research company.
Russia's population fell from 148.6 million in 1991, the year the Soviet Union collapsed, to 141.9 million in 2011, according to World Bank figures.
The law will ban smoking in public places such as subways and schools from June 1, and come into force a year later in other places including restaurants and cafes.
It will also ban sales of tobacco products at street kiosks from June 1, 2014, restrict advertising and set minimum prices for cigarettes which now cost 50 to 60 roubles a pack (less than US$2).
Putin hopes the law will help undermine an entrenched cigarette culture and reverse a decline in Russia's population since the collapse of the Soviet Union.
Advocating the law in a video blog before it was submitted to parliament last year, Prime Minister Dmitry Medvedev said nearly one in three Russians were hooked on smoking, and almost 400,000 die each year from smoking-related causes.
The Kremlin said the law was intended to bring Russia into line with a World Health Organization tobacco control treaty that Moscow ratified in 2008.
The law faced opposition from foreign tobacco companies that dominate a cigarette market estimated to be worth US$22 billion in 2011 by Euromonitor International, a market research company.
Russia's population fell from 148.6 million in 1991, the year the Soviet Union collapsed, to 141.9 million in 2011, according to World Bank figures.
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