Pubdate: Fri, 29 Aug 1997 Source: Reuter World tobacco conference closes with dire warnings By Mure Dickie BEIJING, Aug 28 (Reuter) Tobacco smoking posed a growing menace to society and would claim 10 million lives annually by the year 2025, an international conference was told on Thursday. The 10th World Conference on Tobacco or Health closed with strong warnings of a need for caution in settlements on liability claims over the effect of smoking. Tobacco shared only with AIDS the claim to being a major growing cause of premature death, said Judith Mackay of the Asian Consultancy on Tobacco Control. By 2025, smoking would kill 10 million people a year, she said. ``Tobacco's share of all death and disability worldwide will increase from the current three percent to nine percent by 2025,'' Mackay said. A resolution adopted by the meeting, which drew nearly 1,500 delegates from around the world, urged governments to consider carefully the implications of any liability settlements reached with the tobacco industry. Activists said the motion was clearly aimed at the United States, where a proposed $368.5 billion settlement between the tobacco industry and state attorneys general was under review. It requires congressional approval. The resolution called on governments to ensure such settlements did not boost worldwide tobacco deaths and protected the legal rights of those not directly represented. Settlements should force the cigarette companies to pay for damages caused by tobacco and should not inhibit public scrutiny of the industry, it said. The U.S. deal failed on such conditions, making the resolution a powerful call for U.S. President Bill Clinton to oppose the settlement under review, argued Professor Stanton Glantz of the University of California. ``The tobacco industry desperately wants this deal...but the White House won't do this in the face of open opposition from the public health community,'' Glantz said in an interview. ``I've been to lots of these meetings but, for one time, this one may actually make a difference,'' he said. Tobacco consultant Mackay, a senior conference organiser, denied charges by campaigners against the settlement that direct reference to the United States had been cut from the resolution because of pressure from the meeting's Chinese hosts. Glantz said Beijing's representatives had opposed such references in order to avoid interference in another country's internal affairs. Conference officials said the U.S. settlement was among the hottest topics at the meeting, which also aimed to focus action on smoking by women and children and in the developing world. The conference grounds were for five days a rare smokefree zone in Beijing. In her closing address, Mackay painted a bleak future on smokingrelated fatalities but said it was clear that by the 21st century many countries would be enacting unprecedented restrictions on tobacco use. While such countries enjoyed robust health education programmes, nations slower to move against the tobacco industry would grapple with epidemicscale lung cancer and heart disease, she said.