While a pack of Marlboro cigarettes costs about $6 in the United States, the price in Senegal is now a bargain basement $0.79, following a decision by Philip Morris International (PMI) to cut prices in the West African country.
Marlboro, the world' s best selling cigarette, now costs 400 CFA francs (79 cents US) a pack in Senegal, down from 650 CFA francs a price cut of nearly 40 percent, according to Agence France Presse.
Anti smoking activists in Senegal are reportedly fuming over decision. They accuse tobacco companies of pushing into Africa because they' re losing business in the West, where there are increasingly stringent anti smoking laws.
The head of a Senegalese anti smoking umbrella group said it will ask the government to force PMI to reverse the price cut.
AFP said the company refused to explain the decision to slash Marlboro pack prices.
The US group Campaign for Tobacco Free Kids said in a statement that the cheaper Marlboro cigarettes in Senegal is “a move sure to increase tobacco use among youth.”
“Senegal suffers from alarming smoking rates, with nearly one out of every three adults and an estimated 20 percent of youth already smoking,” the group said.
“It is imperative that Senegal' s government take action to counter PMI' s price ploy by increasing the taxes on tobacco products,” Matthew L. Myers, the group' s president, was quoted as saying.
“Higher cigarette prices are scientifically proven to prevent young people from starting to smoke and encourage smokers to quit,” he said.
More from GlobalPost Indonesia' s tobacco farmers protest new regulations (PHOTOS)
Fda warns about menthol cigarettes – business insider
Cheap cigarettes store, buy muratti online from $21.90. cheap cigarettes online at azcigs.biz. cigarettes from russia and ukraine.
The Food and Drug Administration (FDA) released a study on Tuesday July 23 PDF concluding that smoking cigarettes containing menthol a minty tasting alcohol compound make it easier to start smoking and harder to quit.
The study, which reviews decades of scientific literature, concludes
… adequate data suggest that menthol use is likely associated with increased smoking initiation by youth and young adults. Further, the data indicate that menthol in cigarettes is likely associated with greater addiction. Menthol smokers show greater signs of nicotine dependence and are less likely to successfully quit smoking.
Menthol has some pain relieving properties we put it in cough drops to relieve minor throat irritation for example which could be what makes a habit of smoking menthol cigarettes easier to pick up.
There’s a public comment period of 60 days on the review before the FDA will make a decision to ban or keep menthol flavoring around.
The decision will still take years before becoming a reality and could just end up being a restriction on marketing or advertising, or a maximum limit on the amount of menthol allowed in cigarettes.
This new information comes after a study published in the Journal of Nicotine And Tobacco Research in 2012 found that menthol smokers were less likely to die of lung cancer specifically, though it didn’t look at other diseases caused by smoking.
The just published study agrees that “there is little evidence to suggest that menthol cigarettes are more or less toxic or contribute to more disease risk to the user than nonmenthol cigarettes.”
But the report argues that because menthol makes picking up a smoking habit easier and is more attractive to teenagers, they pose a public health threat.
This is just the latest step that the government has taken against flavored cigarettes. All flavors of cigarettes other than menthols, including clove cigarettes and fruity flavors, were made illegal by Congress in 2009 as a part of the Family Smoking Prevention And Tobacco Control Act.
Then, in 2011, a Congressionally mandated committee of experts convened by the FDA found that menthol had a negative effect on public health, according to The New York Times.
Tobacco giants R.J Reynolds and Lorillard fought back against this committee with a lawsuit, suggesting the members are biased and influenced by special interests.