KUALA
LUMPUR, February 17 (IslamOnline.net) - hoping to convince smokers to
drop this habit by highlighting the dangerous consequences of smoking,
Malaysia has launched an anti-smoking campaign.
Though
the campaign - launched Februay 2004 - has rallied anti-smokers with a
“Tak Nak” (Say No) slogan, there are fears that all the efforts
may fall into deaf ears.
“The
campaign is aimed at a large spectrum of the population, including
teenagers who are attracted to smoking at an early age, however, there
are no certainty of the results of this campaign,” a member of the
campaign told Islamonline.net Tuesday, February 17.
“We
do not want this campaign to fizzle out and the government has stepped
in to ensure that it gains enough publicity. Smoking can be stopped if
people are pressed to do so,” said Azizuddin while distributing
anti-smoking literature at a shopping complex in Kuala Lumpur.
However,
it was obvious that those supporting the campaign were mainly people
who do not smoke and to reach them is the easiest thing, according to
a shop owner who sells cigarettes.
He
told IOL that his main business was cigarettes which were selling well
despite the price hike registered during last year’s budget
presented by Malaysian Premier Abdullah Ahmad Badawi.
The
five year national anti-smoking campaign was launched by the Prime
Minister a week ago with a big bang, yet the impact is still hard to
be gauged.
The
government launched the program in a bid to bring the public to
understand the dangers of smoking while cigarettes are now considered
by the authorities as the ‘gateway’ to Malaysia’s drug abuse
problem.
“The
country has a huge drug abuse problem and cigarettes are bound to be
classified as part of the problem if not the vehicle that makes the
problem a persistent one,” said Azzizudin, who told IOL that he
successfully helped his own father and brother to give up smoking.
Despite
the huge banners and the screaming television debut of the
anti-smoking campaign, youth smoking in hiding after school and women
seen smoking in public have yet to diminish in Kuala Lumpur.
Evidence
of more smoking hazards in Kuala Lumpur frequently comes into the
picture when a taxi driver pulls over at a shopping complex, puffing a
cigarette and asking a potential passenger where he was heading to.
In
busses along the Jalan Ampang, people are still seen smoking quietly
in the back seats while others would protest silently.
Before
the “Tak Nak” campaign, the authorities took several steps to make
smoking in public places, taxis, trains and lifts as well as shopping
complexes and restaurants illegal.
A
minor campaign to prevent shops from selling cigarettes to teenagers
kicked off with mild success and it did not prevent young students
from primary or secondary schools to puff their cigarettes behind shop
houses in Ampang or in Kuala Lumpur, said Azizzuddin to IOL.
“Virtually
all drug addicts are cigarette smokers, and this is a bad situation. I
am afraid smoking can lead to other habits, such as (additicting)
drugs,” said Zeti, another member of the campaign.
She
added that it was high time the country cleaned its act on smoking and
the impact it was having on the younger generations.
“Cigarette
advertisement too has an impact on children. Though we are lucky that
we have regulations against aggressive ads in this industry, we still
have a problem on our hands,” she added.
“Wherever
we turn our attention to, there is evidence that anti-smoking
campaigns are not easy to sell in Malaysia because cigarettes are
available everywhere in this country, even in the remotest village,”
said young Zeti, a female graduate from a local university.
The
tobacco industry in Malaysia earns huge rewards with its sales of
cigarettes and despite the high price and the usual warnings by the
ministry of health that smoking is hazardous the health, cigarette
smoking remains a national sport.
“I
will never stop smoking, it’s so fun and I find it crazy that the
authorities are going against it,” said a university student who was
smoking at a bus stand.
Another
pro-smoking citizen told IOL that it was important to crack a pot
while busy at work or after having had a bit of a quarrel with his
wife.
“It’s
a need, an important thing. I wonder why some people says its
“haram” - illegal in Islamic terms,” said the businessman who is
married to three wives.
Most
of the smokers in the country believed that cigarette smoking will not
be reduced and that’s it’s a phenomenon that will stay, how much
the authorities campaigns against it.
“Whether
the “Tak Nak” campaign will be a success or not, we will never
know. One thing is certain, the number of smokers are never going to
be lesser since each year there are thousands who take up smoking,”
said another shopkeeper in Ampang.