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Kick the butt or pay up after Oct 2, warns Ramadoss

TimePublished on Tue, Sep 09, 2008 at 20:56, Updated on Tue, Sep 09, 2008 at 23:32 in Nation section

NO PUFFING: Ramdoss' no smoking formula will kickstart from October 2.

NO PUFFING: Ramdoss' no smoking formula will kickstart from October 2.


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New Delhi: People openly puffing a cigarette in a market place was perhaps Health Minister Anbumani Ramadoss' worst nightmare. But not anymore.

Starting October 2, 2008, there will be a countrywide ban on smoking in public places like offices, restaurants, pubs, bars, railway stations, airports and bus stops.

All Government and private buildings have been asked to enforce this act and if anyone is caught taking a drag, they will have to shell out a fine.

"Right now the fine is Rs 200 rupees, but soon we want to make it Rs 1,000 for individuals and Rs 5,000 for institutions that are allowing this," said Ramadoss.

Anyone caught smoking in public will also have to shell out Rs 200.

With the October 2 deadline staring at them, smokers say they will take it as it comes.

DRIVING OUT THE SMOKE

bullet Ramadoss said the government is empowering school principals, post masters, railway station masters, NGOs and even your boss to book you if you're caught smoking in a public place. He said that the government will continue with its anti-tobacco drive in the form of a ban on smoking in public places from Gandhi Jayanti, and pictorial warning on tobacco products will start from December 1. The pictorial warning will comprise of lacerated body parts of cancer patients and carry a tag line tobacco kills. It will be mandatory for all tobacco companies to carry the pictorial warnings. Focusing on the tobacco menace among the youth, he said that 13 per cent children in the age group of 13-16 years consume tobacco. In order to address this major concern, the government has allocated Rs 22 lakh to each district for creating awareness among people and especially among students. Ramadoss said a number of tobacco de-addiction clinics would come up to help smokers quit. To begin with the government will start 100 clinics and ask medical colleges and district hospitals to open such centres. Last month, the cabinet approved Rs 6 crore for an anti-tobacco drive and promotion of medicinal plants in the country. National Medicinal Plants Boards and National Tobacco Board will make efforts to wean away tobacco growing farmers from tobacco to medicinal plants.

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