: Pubdate: Fri, 21 Jan 2000 Source: International Herald Tribune Page: 1 Contact: http://www.iht.com/ Copyright: International Herald Tribune 1999 Author: James Brooke, New York Times Service CANADA'S WAR ON SMOKING GETS GRAPHIC AND REAL MONTREAL - Taking its war on smoking to a more graphic level, the Canadian government has proposed that cigarette packs carry color photographs of diseased hearts and cancerous lungs and lips. And to illustrate a link between cigarette smoking and male impotence, the Canadian health authorities chose a photograph of a symbolically limp cigarette. Trying to dispell the perception that smoking has sex appeal, the waning would read: "Cigarettes may cause sexual impotence due to decreased blood flow to the penis. This can prevent you from having an erection." Allan Rock, the health minister, made the announcement on what he called "Weedless Wednesday," the national stop-smoking day, saying: "With these hard-hitting health messages and compelling graphics we will reach smokers directly and effectively. Tobacco is the only product on the market that will result a premature death for one out of every two users." With the rate of Canadian teenage smokers having risen in the 1990s, to about 29 percent today, Mr. Rock noted that 90 percent of habitual smokers in Canada acquired the habit before their 18th birthday. When reporters showed the new mock-up packs to students, several described the packs as "gross." The Canadian tobacco industry immediately rejectted the idea of devoting half of the front and back panels of cigarette packs to any of 16 photographs showing smoking-related diseases. Robert Parker, president of the Canadian Tobacco Manufacturers' Council, said Wednesday that in addition to raising "serious doubts as to the legality of these proposals," it would be technically impossible to print such packages in Canada. "It isn't a question of obstructionism," Mr. Parker said, adding that printing companies "have told us it is impossible to do it in Canada." Mr. Rock said he was confident that by the end of this year his proposals would be approved by Parliament. The laws would affect all cigarette makers but would be felt most heavily by the top three Canadian manufacturers, none of which are U.S. subsidiaries. Government research had found that warnings with pictures were 60 times as likely to stop or prevent smoking as were just words. Although California and Canada have featured photographs of cancer patients on billboards and television, the color photographs would be the first time that pictures of cancerous tumors would be printed on cigarette packs, said Garfield Mahood, executive director of the Non-Smokers'Rights Association, a Canadian health group. "Two billion packs are sold in Canada a year - 25 to 30 times a day those packages come out of the shirt pocket or the purse, and they sit on the dash, on the coffee table," said Mr. Mahood, who has designed cigarette warning campaigns here and in other English-speaking countries. "Counting each time they come out, the packs are responsible for 50-60 billion advertising impressions per year. This could cut out 95 percent of those favorable advertising impressions." In the United States, Senator Frank Lautenberg, Democrat of New Jersey, and Senator Richard Lugar, Republican of Indiana, are preparing legislation that would require large, bold warnings like "Cigarettes are addictive" but would not go so far as to require photographs. "Our current cigarette warning labels are an international embarrassment," Mr. Lautenberg said Wednesday in a statement issued in Washington. In 1995, Canada's Supreme Court sided with arguments made by tobacco industry lawyers that parts of the Tobacco Products Control Act were unconstitutional. Now, on grounds of free speech, cigarette makers are challenging parts of a new Tobacco Act passed in 1997, which permits the government to require health warnings. Current warnings on the labels, written statements like those in the United States, are universal but voluntary. - --- MAP posted-by: Allan Wilkinson