On January 9, 2006, China signed the World Health Organisation Framework Convention on Tobacco Control. According to this international treaty, China had to ban smoking in all indoor public places and prohibit all tobacco advertising, promotion and sponsorship within five years so as to protect the public from the deleterious health effects.

China patently failed to comply with the provisions during the first five-year term. Now, as the second term is set to end, it’s clear that it will again fall well short of the goals set by the convention.

According to a recent WHO project report, China has more than 300 million smokers. That is nearly a quarter of its population. Every year, more than 1.4 million Chinese smokers die of tobacco-related diseases while more than 100,000 people are killed by passive smoking.

China still has no national law that effectively bans smoking in indoor public areas. Though something called ‘Implementation Rules on Public Places Health Management’ exists, and China’s main advertising regulation mentions the prohibition of tobacco promotion in the mass media, at sport events and so on, since there is no clear definition of “public places” and no vigorous enforcement or punishments, all these regulations regarding tobacco control amount to very little. Not only is China the world’s largest tobacco manufacturer and has the largest number of smokers, smoking still exists in 70 per cent of workplaces and 82 per cent of restaurants, while tobacco ads are omnipresent in people’s daily lives, according to the WHO report.

Up to now, a dozen of China’s big cities have enacted local tobacco control regulations. But these regulations do not meet the requirements of the WHO Framework Convention on Tobacco Control, nor is their enforcement ideal in the WHO’s estimation.

Earlier this year, China’s Ministry of Finance and State Administration of Taxation finally undertook a two-pronged approach of raising the tax and the price of cigarettes. Meanwhile, the municipality of Beijing enacted far stricter local smoke-free regulations. Some believe that China may be turning the corner in the effort to control tobacco.

Wu Yiqun, an activist in tobacco reform and the vice-director of the Think Tank Research Centre for Health Development, is not so optimistic. In comparison with other countries, she says, China’s smoking control has a long way to go since the related measures amount to only a verbal appeal. As the WHO report notes, only nationwide smoke-free legislation can reduce the number of smokers and protect the public from the ills of passive smoking.

Alas, after 10 years, why is China still hesitating to take this step forward? Why can’t the country come up with a national anti-smoking law? One official claimed that “the law involves complex issues and research and feasibility studies continue to be required”.

China still has not joined the many countries that impose pictorial warnings such as damaged lungs or bad teeth on cigarette packets. Zhang Jianshu, president of the Beijing Tobacco Control Association, pointed out that this kind of image would clearly discourage smokers. However, such a measure has to be imposed by the central government.

Wu Yiqun agrees that putting warning images on cigarette packages is the easiest, as well as the most economical and effective tobacco control education measure. Besides, she stated, Chinese people have the custom of giving cigarettes as a present, so shocking pictures will be useful in changing this habit.

Unfortunately, such an “easy” measure, introduced in more than 60 countries worldwide doesn’t yet garner support from the Chinese authorities. In 2008, in a meeting in South Africa discussing the enforcement details of the WHO Framework Convention on Tobacco Control, the Chinese delegation claimed that the beautiful scenery printed on Chinese cigarette packs embodies China’s historical and cultural heritage and that using a photo of a rotten lung “would insult and show disrespect to the public”.

So what is the real problem holding China back from fighting the harm that tobacco inflicts? In anti-tobacco activists’ eyes, the fact that the State Tobacco Monopoly Administration governs both the selling and the control of tobacco is the root cause of the problem. In other words, this bureau is both player and referee. “It’s the same set of people working for the China National Tobacco Corporation and the State Tobacco Monopoly Administration,” As Li Enze, a Chinese lawyer, told Caixin. “Their director is one and the same person.”

Tobacco monopoly was started to ensure the country’s fiscal revenue. Because of its monopoly, the China National Tobacco Corp (CNTC) makes enormous profits and hands over a huge amount of revenue to the state treasury each year: 41 billion RMB (Dh23.54 billion), a quarter of its total annual profits. Even the China National Petroleum Corporation, the fourth largest company in the world in terms of revenue, and China Mobile Communications Corporation, the world’s largest mobile phone operator by subscribers — both state-owned enterprises — come in behind the state-run tobacco business in filling the public coffers.

As a result, the tobacco industry presents the biggest opposition force to a smoking ban. The CNTC has 33 provincial affiliates and each affiliate owns its own county-level sub-affiliates. The county-level tobacco manufacturers are the ones responsible for cigarette sales and their profits heavily underwrite the local authorities’ treasury. A big tobacco plantation province, such as Yunnan, adds the power of a huge number of tobacco farmers.

Of course, there are ways to make adjustments for both agricultural output and fiscal sources, but Wu Yiqun says the real problem lies elsewhere: No country should ever rely on tax revenues that have a negative effect on the lives of its own people.

— Worldcrunch 2015/New York Times News Service