Tobacco product retailers seek roll back of 85% pictorial warnings

IANS  |  New Delhi 

Over 1,000 retailers of products on Thursday protested outside the office here, demanding reduction in the size of the graphical health warnings on cigarette packets.

According to the retailers, protesting under the banner of representing around 75 lakh retailers across India, the smuggling of products has increased in the country ever since the graphic pictorial warnings came into existence as smuggled cigarette packets do not carry such warnings.

"Since the introduction of picture warning in in May 2009 the smuggling has been increasing, as smuggled products are more appealing as they do not have warnings. We have observed that since May 2016, when the size of the health warnings on products have become larger i.e. 85 per cent on front and back of the pack, we have seen a huge spurt in the availability of smuggled The smuggled have no picture warnings and give the impression to consumers that they are safer," said a statement from the

The protest comes days after the High Court struck down the 2014 amendment rules that mandated pictorial health warnings to cover 85 per cent of product packages.

Earlier, farmers body Federation of All Farmers Association had appealed to the government to bring down the pictorial warning from 85 to 40 per cent.

As part of the anti-policy, on September 22, the sent an advisory to the government preventing shops selling products from dealing in other products such as toffees, candy, chips, biscuits and soft drinks -- products essentially meant for children.

The advisory says if vendors are found selling these products, their licence might get cancelled.

During the demonstration, the retailers from across the country silently protested outside the Nirman bhawan and later submitted a memorandum to the J.P Nadda seeking roll back of pictorial warnings and order on preventing sale of non products.

"The anti-policy is being driven by vested interests promoted by various NGOs who are receiving huge sums of money from International players and who are also hand-in-glove with large retailers. The have also been targeting us, small retailers, to stop selling other items, pushing our customers to their large shops, closing out all our sources of earnings," said Ram Ashrey Mishra, President,

--IANS

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(This story has not been edited by Business Standard staff and is auto-generated from a syndicated feed.)

First Published: Thu, December 21 2017. 14:46 IST