"It is a very favourable judgement. We have lakhs and lakhs of hawkers, retailers, whole sellers and vendors who promote tobacco. With this judgement, commercial promotion of cigarettes will go away," Shakuntala Gamlin, Joint Secretary, Health Ministry, said.
"State governments will now be informed about the judgement and they will have to enforce it through the police authorities and enforcement agencies designated for the same," she said.
The court also slammed the Centre for "conniving" with the tobacco lobby when people are daily dying of cancer.
The Health Ministry had issued a notification regulating the point of sale advertisements in 2005 under the COTPA Act, 2003, in which it mentions that at point of sale, the size of the board used for advertisement of cigarettes and any other tobacco products should not exceed 60 cms by 45 cms.
Gamlin said the ministry was trying to address the issue of reduction of smoking through taxation, statutory health warning, film notifications and deglamourising film personalities as young minds get influenced.
She said the Ministry was now on the lookout for advertisements of any kind (of tobacco products) and that at point of sale, there should not be any brand-pushing.