I once read somewhere that at the height of the BSE (mad cow disease) crisis, British exports of beef to Nigeria increased by 300 per cent. I have searched high and low for the source of that statistic, but I cannot find it.
But I visited this ste a while ago, and bookmarked it for my blogging purposes. I have now remebered the story, and so I offer you another tale of amoral greed to join the all-too-many similar tales.
Read on...the English article is below the French.
reposted from the Addax website
Cigarettes for the Nigerian children/ Des cigarettes pour les enfants Nigérians
Posted by Fodé-Moussa Keita under Santé , Afrique , Nigeria , Droits de l'homme , Nouvelles , Human rights , Health , Politics , Politique , Africa , NewsAfter dubious pills, its is cigarettes that are offered to the Nigerian children
See below for the english version from the Times.
Après les pilules illégales voici les cigarettes qu’on offre aux enfants du Nigéria.
Deux cigarettiers ont mis en place une tactique pour compenser la chute des ventes de tabac dans les pays occidentaux. Philip Morris et British American Tobacco sont en effet accusés d’avoir fait campagne auprès des enfants du Nigeria pour booster leurs ventes, selon le Times.
Les avocats du plus grand état nigérian, Kano, vont tenter aujourd’hui de démontrer que les compagnies de tabac ont commandité des concerts et des événements sportifs, mais surtout, ils ont parfois distribué gratuitement des cigarettes à des mineurs.
Voici la nouvelle originale provenant du Times:
British American Tobacco (BAT) and Philip Morris face allegations that they targeted young and underage smokers in Nigeria to increase smoking rates in developing countries as sales decline in the West.
Lawyers for Nigeria’s largest state, Kano, will argue today that the tobacco companies sponsored pop concerts and sporting events and, in some instances, gave away free cigarettes, to recruit minors to smoking.
Kano is one of four Nigerian states suing BAT Nigeria, its parent company in Britain and Philip Morris International to recover the costs of treating smoking-related diseases.
They are seeking damages of at least $38.6 billion (£19.1 billion).
Kano’s first hearing is today and cases in Gombe and Oyo begin tomorrow and Monday respectively. The Lagos case began in May and more states are expected to join.
“They want to prepare for a problem they know has already been created, as well as restrict the distribution of tobacco to young people,” said Babatunde Irukera, a lawyer representing the state governments. “The public health facilities are overtasked.”
The biggest increase in smoking in Nigeria has been among young people. The number of young women smokers grew tenfold between 1990 and 2001, according to the World Health Organisation.
A large part of the plaintiffs’ evidence will come from the tobacco companies’ internal documents, which were released as part of a multibillion-dollar settlement that the US tobacco industry reached with state governments in the 1990s. The documents, some of which have been seen by The Times, show the companies’ attempts to reach younger smokers by sponsoring well-known musicians, and their efforts to fight tobacco control initiatives.
Although there are laws banning tobacco advertising on billboards and on television and radio, there is no explicit legislation restricting the sale of cigarettes to underage smokers.
The plaintiffs argue that the youth market was and still is important to the tobacco industry, citing a Philip Morris USA report dated March 31, 1981, which says: “Today’s teenager is tomorrow’s potential regular customer, and the overwhelming majority of smokers first begin to smoke while still in their teens.”
A similar document prepared for BAT, dated July 25, 1991, discusses the habits of younger smokers in Nigeria. “New smokers enter the market at a very early age in many cases: as young as 8 or 9 years seems to be quite common,” according to the report, entitled The Cigarette Market in Nigeria.
A report prepared by the tobacco industry’s lobbying group in Nigeria, TACON, on October 18, 1981, detailed its strategy to defeat a Private Member’s Bill introduced in the House of Representatives to make provisions for warning cigarette smokers of the adverse health effects of smoking.
“It was decided that TACON’s main strategy should be to play down the health argument and concentrate instead on the economic,” the report said. “This proved to be the correct approach especially as Nigeria’s economy has been suffering . . . from the world recession.”
In an internal memo dated May 13, 1991, BAT talked about the use of Nigerian artists to promote its Benson & Hedges (B&H) brand, saying: “The young adult music platform of the B&H label is the type of image enhancement we need in Nigeria.”
Stephen Swedlow, an American lawyer who is advising the Nigerian state governments, told The Times: “The international tobacco companies have to develop these . . . markets because the smoking rates in the US and the UK have consistently dropped, based on litigation in the US and public health pressures in the UK.”
A spokeswoman for BAT said that the allegations were completely unfounded. “We don’t market to children and we have never attempted to do so,” she said. “We also actively lobby governments to raise the age at which people are allowed to buy tobacco to 18.”
A spokesman for Philip Morris said: “Philip Morris International and its affiliates do not currently sell cigarettes in Nigeria.”









Rosemary, is it not about time you banned the racist malcontent Selous Scout from posting on your blog? Just ask your webmaster, and he or she would exile the fool.
Posted by: Cheech | Monday, August 13, 2007 at 10:44 PM
You know what they say: Wise men talk because they have something to say; fools, because they have to say something.
Rosemary, I thought this page was intended to discuss the proven hazards of smoking, sociatal issues, big business and our youth etc.
"Cheech", many of us bloggers take offence to the ease with which you bandy about the term - racist.
As for exiling him, I think if you took the time to read the facts, you would note that he has been in exile from his home, since the 90's.
I suggest that in future, you please stick to the subject under discussion - avoid finger pointing and for once make a contribution to the subject matter instead of constantly crossing-swords with every blogger you judge as 'racist'.
Posted by: jonas | Saturday, August 25, 2007 at 11:43 PM
Jonas, are you addictive nicotine or carcinogenic tar? I am on exile too. No big deal, as far as I am concerned. The planet is my oyster, even where there are aggregates of racists.
"Racists. Racists. Racists. Get used to the word. Have you yet done penance for your racism, Selous Scout? If you have, the word would no longer sting.
When dry bones are mentioned in a proverb, the old woman becomes uneasy
–Chinua Achebe, Things Fall Apart.
Vending of cigarettes to Nigerian minors, when the practice is being clamped on everywhere, is not just a story about capitalism gone mad, but it is equally a story of RACISM. Idiot negroes are not expected to notice nor to care as proven addictive toxins are marketed to their children.
Rosemary, please exile these scalliwags!
Posted by: cheech | Tuesday, August 28, 2007 at 11:54 PM