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    Australian court OKs logo ban on cigarette packs

    CANBERRA, Australia (AP) — Australia has urged other countries to adopt the world's toughest law on cigarette promotion, which was upheld Wednesday by the country's highest court and prohibits tobacco companies from displaying their logos on cigarette packs.

    The High Court rejected a challenge by tobacco companies who argued the value of their trademarks will be destroyed if they are no longer able to display their distinctive colors, brand designs and logos on cigarette packs.

    Starting in December, packs will instead come in a uniformly drab shade of olive and feature graphic health warnings and images of cancer-riddled mouths, blinded eyeballs and sickly children. The government hopes the new packs will make smoking as unglamorous as possible.

    [Related: Medical marijuana ads under attack in Denver]

    "Many other countries around the world ... will take heart from the success of this decision today," Attorney General Nicola Roxon told reporters after the court ruling.

    "Governments can take on big tobacco and win and it's worth countries looking again at what the next appropriate step is for them," she added.

    British American Tobacco, Philip Morris International, Imperial Tobacco and Japan Tobacco International are worried that the law will set a global precedent that could slash billions of dollars from the values of their brands. They challenged the new rules on the grounds that they violate intellectual property rights and devalue their trademarks.


    The cigarette makers argued that the government would unfairly benefit from the law by using cigarette packs as a platform to promote its own message, without compensating the tobacco companies. Australia's constitution says the government can only acquire the property of others on "just terms."

    The court, which ordered the tobacco companies to pay the government's legal fees, withheld its reasons for the judgment on Wednesday. They'll be released later this year.

    Philip Morris said it would continue to pursue compensation through the terms of a bilateral investment treaty between Australia and Hong Kong.

    "There is still a long way to go before all the legal questions about plain packaging are fully explored and answered," company spokesman Chris Argent said in a statement.

    [Related: Playing sports may prevent kids from smoking]

    British American Tobacco spokesman Scott McIntyre said the company was disappointed in the court's decision but would comply with the law.

    "Although the (law) passed the constitutional test, it's still a bad law that will only benefit organized crime groups which sell illegal tobacco on our streets. ... The illegal cigarette black market will grow further when all packs look the same and are easier to copy," McIntyre said in a statement.

    Imperial Tobacco echoed that argument.

    "Plain packaging will simply provide counterfeiters with a road map," spokeswoman Sonia Stewart said in a statement. "The legislation will make the counterfeiters' job both cheaper and easier by mandating exactly how a pack must look."

    Australia's Health Minister Tanya Plibersek dismissed those claims, saying there are still measures to prevent counterfeiting, such as the use of alphanumeric codes on legitimate cigarette packs.

    Australia faces a potential challenge to its laws through the World Trade Organization, with three tobacco growing countries — Ukraine, Honduras and the Dominican Republic — making official requests for consultation on plain packaging. Consultations are the first stage of the WTO's dispute resolution process.

    These countries argue that the laws contravene Australia's international obligations in respect to trade-related aspects of intellectual property.

    Roxon said while countries had raised with Australia the trade implications of the laws, her government would fight to maintain them.

    "It's never been asserted successfully around the world in any trade dispute that governments are not allowed to take public health measures to protect their community," she said.

    Ross McKenzie, a Macquarie University lecturer on health studies, said it was likely that the tobacco industry was behind the WTO challenge.

    "From everything I've read, the challenges won't be particularly strong," McKenzie said.

    "The trademarks aren't being expropriated; they're being restricted in their use, which is quite different. There're lots of trademarks that are restricted by lots of governments," he added.

    Tobacco advertising was banned from Australian television and radio in 1976. Restrictions on advertising have tightened over the years to include print ads, the Internet and retail outlets.

    Smokers account for 17 percent of Australia's population, compared with around 20 percent of American adults.

    With high taxes aimed at dissuading smokers, a pack of 25 cigarettes retails in Australia for about 16 Australian dollars ($17).

    ____

    Associated Press writer Kristen Gelineau in Sydney contributed to this report.

     

    4,209 comments

    • John Gullbonny  •  11 hrs ago
      Imagine the condom boxes!
      • Anthony 1 hr 2 mins ago
        @ Donald: when what you do comes out of my pocket via health care costs and breathing in what you smoke while I walk by: then it becomes my buisness. When what you do polutes my air and we have to spend money on second hand smoke health costs: it becomes my buisness. When what you do litters the ground around us and puts nicotine toxins in the water: yep, you guessed it it becomes my buisness. We are taxed by your actions, that is, the entire country is affected.
      • Andres 3 hrs ago
        I agree with you on government not enforcing you to do #$%$ but when you have people on medicare causing tax payers billions of dollars related to cigarrett deaths thats different.
      • brian 3 hrs ago
        @Daniel
        You must read a lot of childrens books.
    • David  •  8 hrs ago
      They will give away a free cigarette case with each pack. Dump the smokes into it and move on. I quit last year and I'll tell you, nobody will quit until they are ready to quit.
      • DaryleP 3 hrs ago
        Whoever said you won't quit until your ready is exactly right. I tried to quit unsuccessfully for years. I'd quit for a few months then something would make me start again. I didn't start smoking until I quit playing sports in College at 20, and quit at 37 and was never a heavy smoker. One day I just stopped buying them and bought the Nicorette lozenges 3 weeks later, I couldn't stand the taste of cigarettes anymore.
      • Candace 3 hrs ago
        I quit when I became pregnant. I cold turkey'd. I don't think anyone should "ban" smoking and I don't think putting gross pictures on the packages is going to make a true smoker thinkt twice. It's population control. Just don't force me and my kids to inhale the second hand smoke. Almost all places have banned smoking in buildings. I don't care but I don't want my kids to have to breathe that in. I believe in freedom. Don't ban smoking completely. Smoke in your cars (without your kids in it), smoke in your own house, smoke in your own yard, I don't care! Anyone have a smoke? Now I want one!
      • tu madre 3 hrs ago
        i quite 16 years ago,best idea ever,it was real hard but yes i did it!!!
    • John  •  17 hrs ago
      I'm trying to quit for the first time in 25 yrs. It is a b*@#h.
      • Michael noel 30 mins ago
        when you quit, say to yourself, i will not smoke right now but later. keep saying that to yourself every time you want one: even when later comes. eventually, later becomes further and further down your timeline so that you will NOT want to smoke one, even later. you can do that with most ANY addiction.
      • Kenneth 2 hrs 0 mins ago
        Thru-the-fog - Somehow I overlooked your post of 11+ hours ago. I am so very sorry for your loss. After the loss of a spouse, most of us would have upped our smoking considerably to deal with the loss, the pain and the unending loneliness of nights without sleep. With all you went through, following a course toward non-smoking is probably the most courageous story told on this thread. My heart is sad for your loss, but my hat is off for your strength!
      • Chris 2 hrs 11 mins ago
        John you can do it. I have not had one in 11 months, and trust me, it was hard. But you can! First, don't say trying to quit, say "I'm quitting." Don't go cold turkey. Try the Nicorette Gum, it really helped with the nicotine AND the cravings. Make a bet with a loved one too. Thats what really did it, no way did I want to pay my twin sister $100, i'd have never heard the end of it.
    • WooHoo  •  13 hrs ago
      "You could have a black pack of cigarettes called 'Tumors' with a skull and cross bones on it, and smokers would still line up to get a pack." ~Dennis Leary (paraphrased)
      • Keijuhl 31 mins ago
        Smoking is great for your health. Just ask anyone who has died of throat or lung cancer!
      • Joe 2 hrs 40 mins ago
        Why do they crack the window when they drive & smoke? M-
        16 has 20 round mags ( so does a pack of smokes ). My smoking room is avaliable 24/7 to any visitors that have to have one, it's outside........

        No smoking in our break trailors is very nice! Some slug co-worker would light one while it was still burning & eat a sandwich. I pass by a local funeral home & folks are outside on the front porch lighting up. Doesn't matter if friend died of lung cancer or any host of reasons relating to smoking.
      • Dooglas 2 hrs 52 mins ago
        The UK already does something like that with their cigarettes, actually.
    • Robert  •  Dekalb, Illinois  •  12 hrs ago
      Well I can see cigarette cases making a big come back.
      • Joe T 6 hrs ago
        Not only will cigarette cases be making a come-back, the Australian-base distributors will probably GIVE THEM AWAY. They'll start with simple plastic boxes that can be obtained at the point-of-sale. Big business isn't going to lose this one. Wait and see......
      • Angry Man 6 hrs ago
        Shhhh! Danm it Brittney. Don't give them any new ideas. LOL!
      • BrittneyB 6 hrs ago
        No, not if they raise the price and tax on the patch.
    • The Psychotic Libertarian  •  14 hrs ago
      The entire package could be the warning label, the brand name could be "Death", there could be a promise that you WILL develop cancer within 20 years, and smokers would still buy the packs and puff away.
    • jeff  •  Vienna, Virginia  •  12 hrs ago
      I quit smoking 6 days ago after 21 years!
    • Jeff  •  Union Grove, Wisconsin  •  16 hrs ago
      I'll trade you a mouth cancer for your blindness pack
    • Mr. E  •  Oshkosh, Wisconsin  •  1 day 3 hrs ago
      spin this into a new advertisment, "smokes - 6 different boxes, collect the entire set"
    • Mike  •  Hampton, Virginia  •  14 hrs ago
      I would like to be in the cigarette case business in Australia this year.
    • yahoo user  •  4 hrs ago
      I guess cigarette cases will get popular again.
    • Sellinstuff528  •  1 hr 32 mins ago
      I'm no fan of smoking, but why pick on just cigarettes? Why not have pictures of what alcohol does to a body on the back of Jim Bean? Pictures of innocent victims killed in DUI accidents on cartons of Budweiser?
    • Tom H  •  Middletown, New York  •  13 hrs ago
      Sadly, history has shown that these types of messages just desensitize the public. I support any effort that helps those that want to quit perhaps this effort will cause some peer pressure. Those that do want to quit, not will not quit.
    • Bosoxinny  •  1 day 3 hrs ago
      It really doesn't matter. As a former smoker, I can tell you that it absolutely does NOT matter what kind of decorations or desecration are on a pack of cigarettes. If a person craves a cigarette, they're going to buy and smoke a pack of cigarettes, drably colored....
      or not.
    • Kevin  •  8 hrs ago
      Now if they could make banks and investment firms post warning signs: "Using these services may cause bankruptcy"
    • just me  •  1 day 2 hrs ago
      the old packs will be collector's items
    • j  •  1 hr 22 mins ago
      great ,now keep that dwn under and we will enjoy freedom and choice up here,
    • sregit73  •  8 hrs ago
      Hell, all speeders have to paint pictures of gruesome wrecks.....
    • ElleE  •  10 hrs ago
      Instead of asking for Salems, I ask for Eyeball lights?
    • Gregg M  •  Baltimore, Maryland  •  1 hr 36 mins ago
      Nobody CARES what ridiculous pictures are on a pack of cigarettes. Guess what?......People KNOW cigarettes are bad for them ok? You act like putting these images on the packs is gonna make people go "Oh my God!!!!! I had NOOOOO idea that smoking could do such a thing!!!!!"......Hahahahahahahahahahaha
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