Pubdate: Mon, 31 May 1999 Source: Scotsman (UK) Copyright: The Scotsman Publications Ltd 1999 Contact: http://www.scotsman.com/ Forum: http://www.scotsman.com/ Author: JENNY PERCIVAL Political Correspondent SNOOKER WINS REPRIEVE ON TOBACCO ADS SNOOKER is set to get a three-year reprieve from the Government's ban on tobacco sponsorship in sport under the same deal given to Formula One motor racing. Under proposals being drawn up by the Department of Health, the sport will be given until 2006 to find other sponsors. The health education lobby reacted angrily to the new concession and the anti-smoking group ASH (Action on Smoking and Health) in Scotland said it would lobby the Scottish parliament to deny snooker an extension. The row blew up as the World Health Organisation launched World No Tobacco Day today. In December 1997 the UK signed up to a European Union directive committing member states to outlawing tobacco sponsorship in sport by 2003, with a three-year extension for sports that operate on more than one continent and rely heavily on tobacco money. The Government will publish draft regulations setting out how it intends to implement the directive within the next few weeks. The regulations will list the criteria sports must meet to win a three-year extension but will not name individual sports. Officials from sports seeking a reprieve will be asked to prove they meet the criteria and it is understood ministers accept snooker's case. Formula One motor racing has already been given a three-year reprieve on the grounds that it is heavily reliant on tobacco sponsorship. But Labour faced accusations of sleaze when it emerged that Bernie Ecclestone, Formula One's chief executive, had donated UKP1 million to the party. Lord Neill, the chairman of the Committee on Standards in Public Life, subsequently told the party to hand the money back. Snooker's governing body the World Professional Billiards and Snooker Association, has been lobbying the Government for a similar concession. The WPBSA chief executive, Jim McKenzie, met the Prime Minister, Tony Blair, in Downing Street in November 1997 when he complained that snooker was more dependent on tobacco money than Formula One. "We really have no argument about the Government taking tobacco out of sport. I can see the good sense in that. But the issue was that Bernie Ecclestone was getting preferential treatment. Tony Blair got very aggressive when we accused him of that," he said. Lord Archer of Weston-super-Mare, the WPBSA president, said he was hopeful that the exemption for Formula One would be extended to cover snooker and indicated that other sports may benefit as well. "It certainly made no sense to us that one sport should have this privilege and the rest of us should be ignored," he told BBC Radio 4's the World at One programme. I suppose the Government has come to realise that snooker in particular - and possibly other sports as well - will have to be given the same playing field as the rest." However the move was condemned by anti-smoking campaigners, including the chairman of the influential Commons health committee, David Hinchliffe, a Labour MP. "Snooker is a sport that features frequently in televised coverage and therefore the tobacco people will realise they have got direct television advertising of their products," he told the programme. Wendy Ugolini, a spokeswoman for ASH, accused the Government of taking a "half-hearted" attitude towards its commitment to end tobacco sponsorship in sport. "We're disappointed that the Government is allowing snooker an exemption but we will be lobbying the Scottish parliament to see if they can implement the European directive any earlier than Westminster." A Department of Health spokeswoman said she was unable to comment on whether snooker would qualify for a three-year reprieve. She added: "The Government manifesto commitment was to end tobacco advertising and the Government is going to do just that. "The EU agreed that sports operating on a global scale would have an extra three years to introduce the tobacco advertising ban so their sports would not be jeopardised." Meanwhile, SmithKline Beecham, Pharmacia & Upjohn and Novartis, three of the world's biggest pharmaceutical companies, celebrated World No Tobacco Day by forming a special task force to advise and help anti-smoking campaigners. David Graham, in charge of developing nicotine replacement products at Pharmacia & Upjohn, said: "There is a common agenda. We are all health care companies which make products that can help people give up smoking. "Organisations like the WHO and, increasingly, government departments, are starting to take a stronger stance over treatment for tobacco dependence." One third of all adults smoke - about 1.1 billion people across the world. The WHO estimates that by 2020 tobacco will be the leading cause of death and disability, killing more than ten million people a year - two million in China alone. - --- MAP posted-by: Don Beck