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Cambodia announces ban on smoking shisha and e-cigarettes

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Cambodia announces ban on smoking shisha and e-cigarettes


Prohibition comes into immediate effect in what government says is an attempt to safeguard the health of young people attracted to fashionable ways to consume nicotine


PUBLISHED : Thursday, 27 February, 2014, 6:59pm
UPDATED : Friday, 28 February, 2014, 5:14pm

Agence France-Presse in Phnom Penh

cambodiashisha.jpg


Cambodia has banned the smoking of shisha and e-cigarettes. Photo: SCMP

Cambodia has banned e-cigarettes and shisha pipes saying the increasingly popular products contain damaging levels of nicotine and are leading young people to take up smoking.

The National Authority for Combating Drugs (NACD) ordered authorities to immediately cease the import, use and sale of shisha tobacco and pipes and e-cigarettes across the country, according to a directive issued to local authorities on Wednesday.

The NACD said that while neither is classified as a drug, they contain high levels of nicotine that “affect the health more seriously than cigarettes”.

Cigarettes are widespread in Cambodia but over recent years wealthy, young Cambodian smokers are also turning to shisha lounges especially in the tourist hubs of Phnom Penh and Siem Reap.

Shisha, also known as hookah or hubbly-bubbly, is a Middle Eastern tradition of smoking flavoured tobacco via pipes and a water bowl.

E-cigarettes – battery-powered devices that simulate smoking by heating and vaporising a liquid solution containing nicotine – have also won a small but growing customer base in the kingdom.

The directive ordered authorities to confiscate shisha tobacco, pipes and e-cigarette paraphernalia, saying young people are being distracted from their studies by socialising over a shisha.

The move prompted dismay from businesses serving shisha.

Lem Oudom, manager of The Sands shisha lounge in the capital, said the ban was “unfair” because the fruit-flavoured tobacco does not contain illicit drugs.

But he said he would follow the order and cease selling shisha.

According to a 2005 study by the World Health Organisation (WHO), water pipe smoke contains high concentrations of toxic compounds, including carbon monoxide, heavy metals, cancer-causing chemicals and potentially addictive levels of nicotine.


 
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