Source: Guardian, The (UK) Contact: http://www.guardian.co.uk/ Pubdate: Thu, 14 May 1998 Author: Martin Walker EU VOTES TO BAN ALL TOBACCO ADVERTISING All tobacco advertising, whether on television, radio, billboards or in print, is to be banned in Europe, after the European Parliament voted yesterday by 314 to 211 to defeat a crucial blocking amendment on the legality of the ban. The vote followed a last-ditch attempt by the tobacco industry and its allies to send the bill back into the arbitration procedures of national governments. The trade associations of European publishers and advertisers threatened legal action against the ban, calling it a threat to freedom of expression and their industries. The ban will be enforced in stages from 2001. National parliaments will have two years to enact the appropriate legislation. The final stage will end the sponsorship of international sporting events and teams in October 2006. The move had the enthusiastic backing of the European Commission, whose social affairs commissioner, Padraig Flynn, promised to tackle the hypocrisy of the EU subsidising tobacco farmers. Opponents of the ban claim the EU spends twice as much subsidising tobacco as the manufacturers do to advertise it. * The former Norwegian prime minister, Gro Harlem Brundtland, became the first woman to head the World Health rganisation yesterday and called for a global campaign against tobacco advertising. The 59-year-old doctor accused cigarette companies of targeting children in the Third World to make up for shrinking markets in the West. - --- Checked-by: "Rolf Ernst"