New Zealand repeals world 1st anti-smoking ban

New Zealand repeals world 1st anti-smoking ban

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New Zealand repeals world 1st anti-smoking ban

New Zealand repealed landmark tobacco legislation Wednesday night that would have made it illegal for people born after Jan. 1, 2009, to buy cigarettes.

The move, initiated by the centre-right government of Prime Minister Christopher Luxon, also means there will be no cut in the nicotine content of cigarettes or reduction in the number of outlets able to sell tobacco.

While the measures, introduced by the former Labour Party government, took effect in January 2023 they had yet to be implemented.

Defending the government move, which has been condemned by health experts, Associate Health Minister Casey Costello told parliament that the government was not stopping other efforts to help reduce smoking rates.

“This government is committed to the Smoke free 2025 goal, but we are taking a different regulatory approach to reducing smoking rates and the harm from smoking,” Costello said at the bill’s first reading, referring to the nation’s goal of reducing smoking rates to less than 5 percent of the population by 2025.

The laws proposed by then Prime Minister Jacinda Ardern in 2022 had received international acclaim, and is thought to have inspired a similar smoking ban plan for young generations announced by the British government last year, according to reports by the British Broadcasting Corp.

But Luxon’s government — a coalition between his centre-right National Party, the right-wing ACT party and the populist New Zealand First — has moved to repeal several policies put forward by Ardern and her successor Chris Hipkins since taking office in November last year.

The policies include winding back the use of the indigenous Maori language in government departments, and scrapping “co-governance,” or shared decision-making and management between Maori and government representatives in the delivery of public services.