Source: San Francisco Chronicle (CA) Contact: http://www.sfgate.com/chronicle/ Pubdate: Sat, 18 Apr 1998 Author: Sabin Russell, Chronicle Staff Writer PELOSI WANTS LAWS ON SALE OF U.S. TOBACCO ABROAD Country's worldwide image is at stake, she says With a backdrop of American cigarette ads and posters from around the globe, San Francisco Congresswoman Nancy Pelosi called yesterday for tough new restrictions on U.S. tobacco marketing overseas. At a Chinatown press conference, the San Francisco Democrat, together with Richard Durbin, D-Ill., a key opponent of the tobacco industry in the U.S. Senate, tried to drum up support for a set of rules for international marketing to be included in any comprehensive federal tobacco legislation. "The cowboy that has run roughshod over children in America is now doing so overseas," said Durbin, pointing to a Marlboro ad used in Asia. "These are God's children. They need protection all around the world, and we should accept that responsibility." Pelosi warned that America's image abroad is at stake. "How can we say that tobacco is not OK for our young people, and then say it is OK for young people overseas?" she said. "This is a very important issue. We must stop having the icons of America closely tied to smoking." But the lawmakers stopped short of declaring they would not vote for a bill that left out the desired international provisions -- a section the tobacco industry is fighting to delete from bipartisan legislation under debate in Washington, D.C. "I'd have to think long and hard about a bill that (was) good for Americans but not for the children of other countries," said Pelosi. The provisions would bar government aid in marketing tobacco products abroad, fund anti-smoking advertisements overseas, require warning labels to be placed on cigarette packs sold in other countries and levy a tax on tobacco firms of 2 cents on each pack of cigarettes sold abroad in order to finance such efforts. Steve Duchesne, a spokesman for a coalition of the five largest American tobacco companies, said such restrictions are totally unacceptable. "Congress cannot make the law for other countries," he said. "You simply cannot export the law." Although tobacco companies have pledged not to sell their products to children in the United States, Duchesne said that in some other countries there are no minimum ages for tobacco use. "Clearly, tobacco use is viewed differently from culture to culture outside the U.S.," he said. ``It is unfair to subject U.S. companies to different rules and regulations than other companies functioning in foreign markets." The international regulations sought by Congress, he said, would "effectively eliminate exports" of U.S. tobacco products, cutting American tobacco production by one-third and eliminating thousands of jobs. "It will merely shift the business to foreign competitors, most of which are state-run monopolies," said Duchesne. But at the San Francisco Chinatown setting, chosen as a symbol of America's diverse international heritage, critics said it would be the height of hypocrisy for Congress to pass laws restricting the marketing of U.S. tobacco products to American teenagers but to permit it in less developed parts of the world. "The U.S. government, and U.S. taxpayers, should not be a part of any deal to underwrite or subsidize the export of deadly products overseas," said Durbin, who as a congressman led the fight to ban cigarettes from airliners. A panel of international tobacco experts emphasized that half of American tobacco company profits are now made overseas, and that cigarettes are becoming a symbol of American marketing power in China and the former communist countries of Europe. Pelosi said she was astonished by two Filipino calendar posters featuring the Virgin Mary and St. Theresa, and below them an assortment of American cigarette packs. Mark Palmer, a former U.S. ambassador to Hungary while it was still under communist control, told the news gathering that he was shocked at how U.S. tobacco companies used advertisements to equate American cigarettes with freedom. He called tobacco marketing abroad "the biggest damage the U.S. has done to other societies" and an affront conducted "on a massive scale." Asked if U.S. tobacco companies are marketing directly to children, Palmer produced a recent advertisement for R.J. Reynolds' Camel brand released in Poland, which featured a carload of smiling teenagers smoking cigarettes. The ad is linked to a music concert series sponsored by the tobacco company that Palmer said is aimed at children ages 12 to 17. "Every half-hour, kids pass out free cigarettes to kids," he said. "They are taking our own value system and the love of Poles for America and corrupting it for their own immoral and unethical purposes," said Palmer. Lawmakers said that Americans should be concerned about how U.S. companies represent our culture abroad. "We in the U.S. are going to be held accountable for this," said Durbin. "It is shameful, disgraceful and unacceptable." Tobacco industry spokesman Duchesne said the arguments against international marketing may well be moot, because the industry has walked away from talks on federal tobacco legislation. "What began as a noble purpose to reduce youth smoking has degenerated into politicians seeking a measure of revenge against these companies, and to extract higher taxes against smokers," he said. Tobacco makers ``disengaged'' from the debate in Congress when lawmakers increased the settlement costs to more than $500 million, above the $328 million agreed to in settlement talks with states' attorneys general. The international provisions were not included in the earlier proposed settlement. )1998 San Francisco Chronicle