Pubdate: Fri, 24 Sept 1999 Source: Examiner, The (Ireland) Copyright: Examiner Publications Ltd, 1999 Contact: http://www.examiner.ie/ Author: Evelyn Ring GOVERNMENT MAY FOLLOW US LEAD AND TAKE ON THE TOBACCO INDUSTRY An Oireachtas committee is to tell the Government next month whether it should follow the lead of the US administration and take on the tobacco industry in Ireland. This week the US Attorney General Janet Reno announced that the US Government had filed a lawsuit in federal court in Washington DC against the major cigarette companies. In the US the tobacco industry has already agreed to pay over $250 billion to the 50 states. The Joint Committee on Health and Children, chaired by Fianna Fail TD, Batt O’Keeffe, has been examining the Irish tobacco industry over the past two years. Their report is expected to be ready at the end of next month. Over 6,000 people die in Ireland every year from smoking related illnesses while over 15,000 people are undergoing medical care each year. Solicitor Peter McDonnell represents more than 200 people in cases against the industry, including snooker ace Alex Higgins. He believes the Irish Government should take on the tobacco industry in a bid to recoup the massive cost to the health system arising from smoking related illnesses. “President Clinton’s assertion that the taxpayers shouldn't pay for the cost of lung cancer, emphysema and other smoking related illnesses and that the tobacco industry should, applies equally to this country,” said Mr McDonnell. The solicitor said his firm in Dublin had been pushing the Government for the past two years to issue proceedings against the Irish tobacco industry to recover the money spent on health care. Another solicitor who has over 1,000 clients taking actions against the Irish tobacco industry is Hugh Ward. His Dublin based firm is working closely with two American lawyers who successfully represented 19 American states in actions against the tobacco industry. This week the two American lawyers privately met officials of the Department of Health and the Joint Committee on Health and Children to tell them of their experience in taking on the tobacco industry. - --- MAP posted-by: Derek Rea