ֱ

Tobacco conference to weigh up stubbing out cigarette butts

Tobacco conference to weigh up stubbing out cigarette butts
Discarded cigarette filters are pictured on the ground at Pardisan park in Tehran on September 13, 2025. (FILE/AFP)
Updated 3 min 18 sec ago

Tobacco conference to weigh up stubbing out cigarette butts

Tobacco conference to weigh up stubbing out cigarette butts
  • Next week’s global conference on tobacco control will consider what to do about the sheer volume of cigarette butts trashing the planet

GENEVA: Next week’s global conference on tobacco control will consider what to do about the sheer volume of cigarette butts trashing the planet, with some recommending banning them completely.
“The best thing that we could see for the environment is getting rid of filters altogether,” Andrew Black, acting head of the secretariat of the World Health Organization Framework Convention on Tobacco Control (FCTC), said Thursday.
Plastic cigarette filters are the world’s most littered item, leaching toxic chemicals into the environment and breaking down into microplastics — while doing very little for the smoker, the secretariat said.
The 11th conference of the parties to the FCTC is being held in Geneva from November 17-22.
The WHO warned Wednesday that the tobacco industry was trying to infiltrate and undermine the conference.
- Litter and pollution -
Black said that, among other topics, the gathering would look at the environmental damage wrought by the tobacco industry and its products.
“An estimated 4.5 trillion cigarette butts are littered each year worldwide, making them the most common form of litter on the planet,” he told reporters.
“These discarded butts are toxic and a significant source of plastic pollution, due to their filters, which do not biodegrade.”
Furthermore, plastic filters “don’t provide any meaningful increase in the safety of cigarettes,” he said.
Rudiger Krech, the WHO’s environment and climate change chief, said it was “high time to ban those plastics... because they are the highest pollutants in waters” and are “contaminated also with toxicants,” he told a press conference.
Ultimately, it will be down to countries what measures they want to take.
To date, around 180 states have ratified the FCTC, which came into effect in 2005.
The landmark treaty brought in a package of tobacco control measures, including picture warnings on cigarette packets, smoke-free laws and increased taxes.
- Death toll -
The conference will take decisions that will set the trajectory of the global tobacco epidemic for future generations, said Black.
He said more than seven million deaths a year were down to tobacco — an “entirely preventable” body count.
Other major agenda items include the “aggressive marketing” of tobacco products, as well as widespread concerns about the numbers of children being lured in to a life of addiction via new means of getting kids hooked.
More than 100 million people are vaping, including at least 15 million teens aged 13 to 15, according to the WHO’s first global estimate of e-cigarette use.
WHO chief Tedros Adhanom Ghrebreyesus said: “Although e-cigarettes are often promoted as safer alternatives to conventional tobacco products, there is no evidence of their net benefit for public health — but mounting evidence of their harm.”
- Infiltration attempts -
Tedros claimed Wednesday that the tobacco industry was motivated by “one thing only: generating profit.”
“We are aware of attempts by the tobacco industry to infiltrate and undermine” next week’s conference, he told journalists.
Benn McGrady, head of the WHO’s public health law and policies unit, said the tobacco industry was “lobbying like crazy” and “trying to sow division.”
He said their new products were being marketed as consumer products of harm reduction, but in fact bore characteristics that are “specifically attractive to children,” such as bright colors and sweet flavours.
Highlighting the “alarming rise in use among children” of e-cigarettes, he said the industry was launching new products on social media — “spaces in which children and young people shape their identities.”
WHO wants comprehensive bans on tobacco advertising, promotion and sponsorship, including for e-cigarettes and nicotine pouches.


Indian police carry out sweeping raids in disputed Kashmir

Indian police carry out sweeping raids in disputed Kashmir
Updated 4 sec ago

Indian police carry out sweeping raids in disputed Kashmir

Indian police carry out sweeping raids in disputed Kashmir
  • There has been no confirmation that the searches this week are connected to Monday’s explosion which killed at least 12 people in New Delhi
  • The blast was the most significant security incident since April 22 attack in Pahalgam which killed 26 people, triggered clashes with Pakistan

New Delhi: Indian police have carried out sweeping raids targeting a banned political party in Indian-administered Kashmir, days after the deadliest blast in the Indian capital for more than a decade.

There has been no confirmation that the searches this week are connected to Monday’s explosion — which killed at least 12 people near the historic Red Fort in the capital’s Old Delhi quarter.

But the raids represent a renewed effort by police to tighten security after the explosion, which the government called “a heinous terror incident” and blamed on “anti-national forces.”

Many of the raids have taken place since Wednesday, according to district police statements from across the Indian-administered part of the Himalayan territory.

Kashmir has been divided between India and Pakistan since their independence from British rule in 1947, and both claim the Himalayan territory in full. Tensions remain high between New Delhi and Islamabad.

Police, including in Kashmir’s Awantipora, Bandipora, Ganderbal, Shopian and Sopore districts, issued statements about the raids, which they said targeted the Jamaat-e-Islami (JeI) party.

Indian Prime Minister Narendra Modi’s Hindu-nationalist government banned the Kashmir branch of Jamaat-e-Islami in 2019 as an “unlawful association.”

'Large-scale operations'

Officers carried out “extensive raids at multiple locations” to “dismantle the terror ecosystem and its support structures,” the police in Awantipora said in a statement.

The department in Bandipora said they had seized “incriminating material,” while the Sopore police said it had carried out “large-scale operations against Jamaat-e-Islami-linked networks,” adding that more than 30 locations were searched.

Officers also raided Al-Falah University in Faridabad, on the southern outskirts of the capital, while security forces on Friday demolished a house in Kashmir’s Pulwama district.

Police have not commented on the demolition, although law enforcement agencies have carried out such destruction against those accused of launching attacks in the past.

India’s anti-terrorism National Investigation Agency is leading the probe into Monday’s blast, and the government has vowed to bring the “perpetrators, their collaborators, and their sponsors” to justice.

But officials, so far, have given little further information on who that might be — and whether it was a homegrown group or had links from abroad.

Indian media have widely connected the November 10 blast with a string of arrests just hours before, when they seized explosive materials and assault rifles.

Police said those arrested were linked with Jaish-e-Mohammed (JeM), an Al-Qaeda linked group, and Ansar Ghazwat-ul-Hind, a Kashmir offshoot linked to JeM.

Concerning those arrests, India’s Jammu and Kashmir police said on Monday — shortly before the explosion — that their investigations had “revealed a white collar terror ecosystem, involving radicalized professionals and students in contact with

foreign handlers, operating from Pakistan and other countries.”

The blast in Delhi was the most significant security incident since April 22, when 26 mainly Hindu civilians were killed at the tourist site of Pahalgam in Indian-administered Kashmir, triggering clashes with Pakistan.