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Hong KongHealth & Environment

Hong Kong to press ahead with cigarette packaging reform

Plan includes increasing warning size and number of graphic images

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Packs of cigarettes are displayed on a stall in Mong Kok. Hong Kong plans to reform cigarette packaging in an attempt to deter smoking. Photo: David Wong
Danny Lee

Hong Kong will press ahead with cigarette packaging reform to increase warnings that “smoking kills”, despite opposition from the tobacco industry, a leading health official said on Saturday.

Cigarette packaging has remained the same since 2007 and it was time for the government to overhaul packaging, Undersecretary for Food and Health Sophia Chan Siu-chee said.

“We feel that at this point in time it is important for us to increase the warning size and also the number of designs from six to 12,” Chan said in a radio interview.

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The size of warnings on cigarette packs would increase to cover 85 per cent of the pack, from the current 50 per cent, and the number of graphic designs would double from six to 12.

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Chan said Hong Kong’s measures to deter smokers were much fairer to the industry and the public than in some other countries, which had legislated unbranded plain packaging or given increased prominence to shocking pictures.

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