INDIA STATES BAN POPULAR
'GUTKA' CHEWING TOBACCO
http://www.huffingtonpost.com -
Ten Indian states have banned a popular form of chewing tobacco in a
major policy shift that may save millions of lives and strike a blow at
the global tobacco industry, already reeling from new anti-smoking laws
around the world. But an estimated 65 million Indians use “gutka” - a
heady form of chewing tobacco made of crushed betel nut, nicotine and
laced with thousands of chemicals - and furious manufacturers are
fighting to have the bans overturned. Companies such as Delhi-based DS
Group are dragging states to courts, complaining that the billion-dollar
industry should be regulated as tobacco and not as food and that the
bans threaten the livelihoods of millions of farmers and street vendors
scattered from Bangalore to New Delhi. “Nobody understands the bigger
picture. What will happen to those poor farmers? No one thinks of them,”
said a company official on condition of anonymity. No company Reuters
consulted would speak on record. Last week, Punjab became the tenth of
28 states to ban the sale of gutka after the Food Safety and Standards
Authority of India reclassified it as a foodstuff, prohibiting the use
of tobacco and nicotine as “ingredients in any food product.”
Gutka
making is controlled by family-run Indian firms, with no international
tobacco companies in the business. Several other forms of chewing
tobacco considered less harmful have not been reclassified as foodstuffs
and are not banned. Some 482 million people live in the 10 states which
have enforced the bans. Delhi, Gujarat and Chandigarh, with a combined
population of 77 million, are due to follow suit - Delhi this week. More
Indians, including children, chew gutka than smoke, making the trend of
outlawing the cheap, colourful packets a more effective health policy
in the world's second most populous nation than anti-smoking laws like
Australia's ban on cigarette pack logos. “We're using all kinds of means
to persuade the rest (of the states) to enforce the ban. It's a central
legislation. States have no option but to abide now,” said Amal Pushp,
director of the health ministry's National Tobacco Control Programme.
Gutka is popular with the young and old alike, many of whom are blase
about the nation's leading cause of oral cancer. Some of the chemicals
in some brands of gutka are also used in tile cleaners and battery
acids. “This is a path to death,” said Abdul, who sold his land in Bihar
to pay for the $9,000 treatment. It will be an uphill battle to keep
gutka away from young people who who have been using it since early
youth.
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Ban on Gutka sale by Indian government came into force this week. Tobacco
has been chewed in India for centuries, dating back to the Mughal era
when nawabs had a concoction known as “paan” - a betel leaf wrapped
around a mixture of areca nut, pastes, spices and tobacco - to refresh
their palates and aid digestion. Gutka and paan masala are products of
recent decades to cater for a fast-paced, modern life. India battles
almost 80,000 new cases of oral cancer yearly. The treatment of
tobacco-related diseases cost more than $5 billion in 2002-2003,
according to Health Ministry and WHO report. Now, it remains to be seen
how well the bans are enforced. Addiction to alcohol, cigarettes and
drugs may be resolved by spiritual quests which give birth to the love
of God.
WHAT DO THE VEDIC TEACHINGS TELL US?
In
the Bhagavad-gita, Krsna describes the psychological cycle that
supports the perpetuation of addictions. Since Yoga involves controlling
one's thoughts, it is a natural remedy. However, the practical action
of Yoga must be integrated with knowledge, which includes knowledge of
the social, metaphysical, and theological realities surrounding the
object of one's attachment. ... The Bhagavad-gita's metaphysics and their social implications are outlined in the concluding six chapters, 13-18. ... The will to transcend one's addiction
must involve a willingness to acknowledges one's weakness. This goes
straight to the heart of Bhakti, wherein one acknowledges his utter
dependence upon God. It is not by asserting one's own willpower that one
can succeed. If we are to conquer our addictions, we must acknowledge
our weakness. In doing so we will simultaneously realize the power of
God. From this fortified position we can succeed and conquer the
insatiable enemy of addiction.
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