Photo: Chinky Shulka/CSEWhat’s
the worst that could happen to India’s campaign against tobacco?
Manufa-cturers of tobacco products join the campaign, market the idea
and make a fortune selling a product which they claim helps addicts quit
tobacco.
India’s largest tobacco product manufacturer ITC Limited did exactly
that when it launched its nicotine chewing gum, KwikNic, in the last
quarter of 2013. Nicotine is the stimulant drug in tobacco that makes it
addictive. The tobacco manufacturer exploited the loopholes in the
current laws not only to enter the market, but also to advertise it
widely on television channels and billboards. The reason: unlike the
tobacco industry which is suffering because of government restrictions
such as hike in taxes and anti-tobacco advertisements, the market for
nicotine gums is growing at an annual rate of 40 per cent.
In 2002, India, which has 270 million tobacco users, legalised
chewing gums with two milligrams (mg) of nicotine under the Drugs and
Cosmetics Act, 1940. Since then several pharmaceutical companies have
launched their products in India, including Nicorette from Johnson &
Johnson, Nicotex and Nicogum from Cipla and Tobaquit from Zydus Cadila.
ITC claims it has registered KwikNic as a drug, but unlike
pharmaceutical companies, it has gone all out and started an aggressive
advertising and marketing campaign to sell the product.
The company exploited the fact that the three pieces of legislation
that govern sale and distribution of drugs and cosmetics in India—the
Drugs and Cosmetic Act, 1940, the Drug and Cosmetic Rule, 1945, and the
Drugs and Magic Remedies (Objectionable advertisements) Act, 1955—are
silent on whether nicotine-based drugs can be promoted/advertised. As a
result, the company has started selling the drug not only at chemist
shops, but also at paan shops, grocery stores and shopping websites.
One of the television commercials of KwikNic shows a bridegroom
struggling to say qubool hai (I do) because of tobacco in his mouth.
Irritated, somebody from the audience screams out the sentence thrice
and gets married instead. The bride faints and the product is pushed as
an alterative to tobacco.
Experts working against tobacco products say the practice started by
ITC to advertise the product and make it easily available at stores will
only help non-smokers get addicted to the nicotine gum and later to
tobacco products. Sindhu Naik of non-profit Karnataka State Council for
Child Welfare (KSCCW) says, “Children can easily get this product which
can lead to nicotine addiction. Besides, the chewing gums are flavoured
and, unlike tobacco products, do not smell. This makes it difficult for
parents to check if their children are using the gum.” KSCCW floated
an online petition against the product in mid-January.
Their concerns might not be unfounded. While there is no data
available on the impact the ITC campaign has had on youngsters, most
paan shop owners Down To Earth spoke to said the demand for the product
has gone up since the advertisements started in January. “On an average,
I sell 10 KwikNic packets to children every day,” says Shyam Singh, a
paan shop owner in South Delhi.
While there are no conclusive studies on the impact of nicotine gums,
doctors warn that prolonged use of the product can increase blood
pressure, hair loss and tooth decay. It can also lead to sleeping
disorders.
In the right direction
Acting on a KSCCW complaint over the sale of KwikNic at grocery
stores and paan shops, Karnataka joint food safety commissioner
Jayakumar says he has asked ITC to withdraw products from the market.
“If they do not follow the instruction, we will conduct raids and seize
the products from the market. Both advertising in popular media and
selling nicotine gums at grocery shops are illegal,” he says.
The Advertising Standard Council of India (ASCI), a self-regulatory
body, also has registered a case against ITC because advertising
nicotine products is against ASCI guidelines. “A complaint was lodged
against the advertisement. A decision has been taken. Now the company
will be asked if it wants to challenge the decision. The whole process
takes two months,” says an ASCI official.
An
ITC spokesperson told says their operations are legal and they got the
manufacturing licence from the joint commissioner of Food and Drug
Administration, Nagpur. The tobacco company has also managed to get
clearances to manufacture the nicotine gum at the Nagpur plant of
confectionery giant Candico. The candy manufacturer’s website reads:
“With over 2 billion confectionery products sold every year, Candico has
been making millions of children smile.”
Maharashtra Drug and Food Commissioner Mahesh Zagade says there is
nothing illegal about the licence. “Government of India has registered
nicotine gum as a drug and it is the duty of the state to give licences,
if someone applies for it,” he says. When asked if it was legal to sell
drugs at paan and grocery shops, he said he was not aware that such
sale was happening and that “action will be taken against them”.
Drug officials at the Centre, however, are not sure about the
validity of the product. L Swasthicharan, chief medical officer with the
Directorate General of Health Services, says he wrote a letter to the
Drug Controller General of India on December 6 last year seeking
clarification on the validity of the product and its advertisement. “I
have asked whether it is registered as food item or as a drug. If it is a
drug, can a tobacco company produce nicotine replacement therapy drug?
Whether it would be sold as an over the counter drug or a prescribed
drug? Can it be sold at shops? Is its advertisement legal?” says
Swasthicharan. “A response is awaited.”
G N Singh, the Drug Controller General of India, says advertisement
of nicotine-based products in the market is prohibited. He maintains he
is not aware that ITC is running an advertisement campaign for KwikNic.
Bhavna Mukhopadhyay, executive director of non-profit Voluntary
Health Association of India, says KwikNic advertisement by ITC is a
clear violation of Section 5 of the Cigarette and Other Tobacco Products
Act, 2003, which bans the advertisement of tobacco products, including
surrogate advertisement, except at shops that sell tobacco products.
Mukhopadhyay points out that the advertisement features ITC logo, which
is illegal because it amounts to surrogate advertising as ITC is
primarily a tobacco manufacturer.
The company has refuted the claim. “KwikNic advertisements are not
advertisements for any brand of cigarettes. These advertisements do not
show or make any reference to cigarettes or cigarette brands. Please
also note that advertisement of nicotine gums is not prohibited by law,”
ITC spokesperson said.