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Tobacco alliance honours ex-Health minister Adewole, Irukera, others over control laws

Nigeria’s tobacco control community on Tuesday in Abuja organised a ‘Thank You Dinner’ to honour lawmakers and public officials who played crucial roles that led to the passage of the National Tobacco Control (NTC) Act 2015 and its regulation.

Among those recognized for their efforts were the immediate past Minister of Heath, Prof. Isaac Adewole; Director General, Federal Competition and Consumer Protection Commission (FCCPC), Mr. Babatunde Irukera, and the Permanent Secretary of the Federal Ministry of Health, Abdullahi Mashi, represented by Dr. Evelyn Ngige.

The event was organised by the Campaign for Tobacco-Free Kids (CTFK) and her Nigerian partners including the Nigeria Tobacco Control Alliance (NTCA), Environmental Rights Action/Friends of the Earth Nigeria (ERA/FoEN), Nigeria Tobacco Control Research Group (NTCRG), and Gatefield Limited, among others.

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In her welcome address, the sub-regional Coordinator (West Africa), CTFK, Mrs. Hilda Ochefu, said the dinner was conceived to thank allies for standing by the CTFK and its partners to ensure Nigeria domesticated the World Health Organisation – Framework Convention on Tobacco Control (WHO-FCTC).

According to her, tobacco use still remains the single most preventable cause of deaths worldwide, capping over 7 million deaths annually and another 890, 000 people that die from second-hand smoke.

L-R: Representative of Permanent Secretary Federal Ministry of Health, Dr. Evelyn Ngige; former Health Minister, Prof. Isaac Adewole, and Sub-regional coordinator (West Africa), Campaign for Tobacco-Free Kids (CTFK), Mrs. Hilda Ochefu during the ‘tobacco control champion’ honour in Abuja. PHOTOS BY: Abbas Jimoh
L-R: Representative of Permanent Secretary Federal Ministry of Health, Dr. Evelyn Ngige; former Health Minister, Prof. Isaac Adewole, and Sub-regional coordinator (West Africa), Campaign for Tobacco-Free Kids (CTFK), Mrs. Hilda Ochefu during the ‘tobacco control champion’ honour in Abuja. PHOTOS BY: Abbas Jimoh

“Although it took Nigeria 10 years to domesticate the WHO-FCTC and another three years to come up with and approve its regulations, the journey is not yet over because immediate implementation which is yet to begin, is key,” she said.

Giving a brief history of Nigeria’s journey to passage of the NTC Act in 2015 and the approval of the Regulations in June 2019, Deputy Executive Director, ERA/FoEN, Dr. Akinbode Oluwafemi, said the journey started with Nigeria’s ratification of the WHO-FCTC in 2005.

Oluwafemi, who was represented by ERA/FoEN Head of Media and Campaigns, Mr. Philip Jakpor, noted that before the NTC Act, the Tobacco Smoking (Control) Decree 20 of 1990 which had provisions prohibiting smoking in certain public places existed but was not enforced.

He said that with Nigeria’s transition from military to democratic governance in 1999, the decree was converted to an Act titled “Tobacco (Control) Act 1990 CAP, T16.

Jakpor said that the phase that culminated in the current comprehensive law started in 2005 when Nigeria ratified the WHO-FCTC and the processes leading to it, including engaging principal officers of the National Assembly and officials of the Federal Ministry of Health; and former president, Dr. Goodluck Jonathan, by signing the National Tobacco Control (NTC) Act in 2015, and thus domesticated the WHO-FCTC.

He said that some of the provisions of the NTC Act were unenforceable and required Regulations which were finally approved by the eighth National Assembly in June 2019.

In their remarks, former Health Minister, Prof. Isaac Adewole and Director General of the FCCPC, Mr. Babatunde Irukera emphasized the dangers of the tobacco menace.

They said innovations like Shisha that is now being increasingly marketed as less harmful was in fact the opposite.

While Irukera promised that the battle to regulate tobacco products and marketing would intensify, Prof. Adewole said his exiting government would not limit his support for tobacco control causes.

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