Expressing concern over larger pictorial warnings on tobacco products, industry bodies CII and FICCI today said it has led to spurt in illegal import of cigarettes and the government must take steps to curb such activities while maintaining the status quo on the matter.
In separate letters to Health Minister J P Nadda, the industry chambers said illicit cigarettes are threatening the "livelihood of crores of farmers and people employed in the (organised tobacco) industry".
"It is indeed a matter of concern that tobacco regulation in India, instead of achieving the stated objective of tobacco control, has unfortunately led to the proliferation of illegal and contraband products," CII Director General Chandrajit Banerjee said in a letter to Nadda.
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"CII urges the government to look into the matter and ensure that a balanced view on the issue of graphic health warnings is taken... Until we are able to rein in the illegal trade in the sector effectively, it would be desirable to maintain a status quo on pictorial warning," he added.
Banerjee said companies manufacturing cigarettes have been compelled to shut operations due to lack of clarity on the proposed graphic health warnings on tobacco packets.
Expressing similar views, FICCI President Harshvardhan Neotia in a letter to Nadda said the "warning is too harsh and will result in flooding of illicit cigarettes and gains to unscrupulous elements at the cost of livelihoods of crores of farmers and people employed in the industry".
"In view of this we would request you to expeditiously resolve the current situation," Neotia said.
Banerjee said the legal Indian cigarette industry has been facing a continuous drop in demand because of high taxation and the exponential growth of duty-evaded illegal cigarettes that do not carry pictorial warnings, thereby creating the impression that they are safer for consumers.
"As a result, legal cigarettes today represent only 11% of tobacco consumption in India," he added.
From April 1, the Health Ministry's notification came into force for implementation of the Cigarettes and other Tobacco Products (Packaging and Labeling) Amendment Rules, 2014. It prescribes larger pictorial warnings, covering 85 per cent of packets on tobacco products.