The anti-tobacco federal law, which will come into force next year,
will ban smoking in private vehicles if a child younger than 12 years is
present in the car.
The Ministry of Health has announced the executive regulations of the
anti-tobacco flaw, which were approved by His Highness Shaikh Mohammed
bin Rashid Al Maktoum, Vice-President and Prime Minister of the UAE and
Ruler of Dubai, in the Cabinet’s Resolution No. 24 issued on July 21,
2013. The said resolution will come into effect six months from the
date of its issuance.
The regulations are part of the government’s efforts to establish an
effective national anti-tobacco strategy to protect public health. Parliament cigarettes.
The ban on the vehicles aims to protect children from being exposed
to cigarette smoke. The law also aims to reduce smoking among youth. A
study carried out in Abu Dhabi showed that 28 per cent of children aged
15 years and younger, are smokers, while 30 per cent of people aged 18
and above are smokers.
The law bans any content that advertises tobacco products, such as
newspaper advertisements, TV commercials and animations. It also bans
importing tobacco products that are not in line with technical standards
set by the UAE, and any violations regarding such imports can lead to a
one year prison sentence and a fine ranging from Dh 100,000 to Dh 1
million, in addition to the confiscation of products.
The law also provides specifications on the packaging of tobacco
products. All products must now display a large warning label on the
front to raise awareness on the dangers of tobacco, and not to mislead
them. Violators will be fined Dh100,000 to Dh1 million, and the fines
can be doubled if the offence is repeated.
Tobacco products cannot be displayed near items marketed for
children, or sportswear, health, food and electronic products. Tobacco
products are also forbidden to be sold in locations that are 100 metres
away from places of worship, and 15 metres away from kindergartens,
schools, universities and colleges.
Shisha cafes will also have to be at least 150 metres away from
residential areas. The regulations also specify that these cafes’
working hours will be from 10am to 12pm. Shishas will not be served to
customers younger than 18 years of age, and the cafes will be forbidden
from delivering shishas to apartments.
Growing or producing tobacco for commercial purposes will also be
forbidden, and current manufacturing plants have been given a grace
period of 10 years to sort out their situation, and tobacco farms have
been given a two-year grace period.
The UAE ratified the World Health Organisation’s Framework Convention
on Tobacco Control (WHO FCTC), the first international treaty
negotiated under the auspices of WHO, in November 2005. The UAE
anti-tobacco law was drafted by the Ministry of Health in 2006. In
December 2009, the UAE issued its own federal anti-tobacco law.
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