Trending...
- The Problem With AI Isn't Compute. It's Memory
- From Broken to Soaring Week 40
- CCHR Calls Out Psychiatry's Pattern of Resistance to Antidepressant Deprescribing
The Coalition of Asia Pacific Tobacco Harm Reduction Advocates (CAPHRA) is warning Indonesia, Malaysia and the Philippines not to repeat the policy mistakes that helped fuel Australia's growing illicit nicotine and tobacco market.
MANILA, Philippines - AkGlobe -- The Coalition of Asia Pacific Tobacco Harm Reduction Advocates (CAPHRA) is warning Indonesia, Malaysia and the Philippines not to repeat the policy mistakes that helped fuel Australia's growing illicit nicotine and tobacco market.
With Indonesia weighing tougher action on vaping, Malaysia moving closer to a broader crackdown, and the Philippines facing renewed pressure for stronger restrictions, CAPHRA says Southeast Asia is now at a critical policy crossroads. The group is urging governments to regulate safer nicotine products sensibly, rather than push consumers toward black markets while cigarettes remain widely available.
More on AkGlobe News
CAPHRA Executive Coordinator Nancy Loucas said the lesson from Australia is clear.
"When safer legal options are pushed out, illicit markets move in," Loucas said. "Southeast Asia should see Australia as a warning, not a model."
CAPHRA says the region does face real problems, including youth uptake, poor enforcement, and adulterated products. But it argues those failures should be addressed with tougher standards, stronger enforcement, and tighter controls on youth access — not by treating all smoke-free nicotine products as if they carry the same risk as cigarettes.
"Combustion remains the main driver of tobacco-related death and disease," Loucas said. "Good policy puts the toughest restrictions on cigarettes, while strictly regulating lower-risk alternatives for adults."
The group says this is not just a consumer issue but a sovereignty issue. Governments in Southeast Asia should shape policy around their own public health needs and consumer realities, rather than import prohibitionist models that have already shown serious unintended consequences elsewhere.
More on AkGlobe News
Clarisse Virgino of CAPHRA Philippines said consumers must not be excluded from the debate.
"Adults who have moved away from smoking should not be treated as an afterthought," Virgino said. "If governments ignore consumers and over-correct with bans, they risk strengthening illicit trade and protecting cigarettes from competition."
CAPHRA notes that senior former WHO figures have also argued that tobacco harm reduction should be part of a credible public health strategy, particularly where the goal is to reduce smoking-related disease rather than simply condemn all nicotine use.
The organisation is calling on Indonesia, Malaysia and the Philippines to adopt balanced regulation that protects young people, enforces product standards, tackles illicit and adulterated products, and preserves regulated adult access to lower-risk alternatives.
"A bad nicotine policy does not end demand," Loucas said. "It just hands that demand to illegal markets."
With Indonesia weighing tougher action on vaping, Malaysia moving closer to a broader crackdown, and the Philippines facing renewed pressure for stronger restrictions, CAPHRA says Southeast Asia is now at a critical policy crossroads. The group is urging governments to regulate safer nicotine products sensibly, rather than push consumers toward black markets while cigarettes remain widely available.
More on AkGlobe News
- Bergey's Truck Centers Recognized in 2026 MACH Alliance Composable Impact Awards
- What Would you Do with Your Time if it Was Actually Money?
- Mr. Hospital Bed Showcases the Best Hospital Bed and Air Mattress for Bed Sores for 2026
- Traian TKD Tractari Auto Iasi: cum transporti legal la RAR o masina fara numere sau cu ITP expirat
- Juneau: Fiscal Year 2027 Budget, Sales Tax Amendments Approved at June 8 Assembly Meeting
CAPHRA Executive Coordinator Nancy Loucas said the lesson from Australia is clear.
"When safer legal options are pushed out, illicit markets move in," Loucas said. "Southeast Asia should see Australia as a warning, not a model."
CAPHRA says the region does face real problems, including youth uptake, poor enforcement, and adulterated products. But it argues those failures should be addressed with tougher standards, stronger enforcement, and tighter controls on youth access — not by treating all smoke-free nicotine products as if they carry the same risk as cigarettes.
"Combustion remains the main driver of tobacco-related death and disease," Loucas said. "Good policy puts the toughest restrictions on cigarettes, while strictly regulating lower-risk alternatives for adults."
The group says this is not just a consumer issue but a sovereignty issue. Governments in Southeast Asia should shape policy around their own public health needs and consumer realities, rather than import prohibitionist models that have already shown serious unintended consequences elsewhere.
More on AkGlobe News
- Mike Williams Golf Center Now Open at Georgia's Lanier Islands Resort
- Appliance EMT Launches June "Summer Rescue" Promotion
- New Luxury Single Family Homes From $976,990 in Manalapan
- Longevityresearch.ca Unveils a Unique Bayesian Causal Atlas; Saves up to 7.9 life years/patient
- K2 Integrity Acquires RiskFront AI to Deliver AI Automation for Financial Crime Compliance and Risk Operations
Clarisse Virgino of CAPHRA Philippines said consumers must not be excluded from the debate.
"Adults who have moved away from smoking should not be treated as an afterthought," Virgino said. "If governments ignore consumers and over-correct with bans, they risk strengthening illicit trade and protecting cigarettes from competition."
CAPHRA notes that senior former WHO figures have also argued that tobacco harm reduction should be part of a credible public health strategy, particularly where the goal is to reduce smoking-related disease rather than simply condemn all nicotine use.
The organisation is calling on Indonesia, Malaysia and the Philippines to adopt balanced regulation that protects young people, enforces product standards, tackles illicit and adulterated products, and preserves regulated adult access to lower-risk alternatives.
"A bad nicotine policy does not end demand," Loucas said. "It just hands that demand to illegal markets."
Source: CAPHRA
Filed Under: Government
0 Comments
Latest on AkGlobe News
- New analysis reveals second job workers keep just 80p in every pound they earn
- NRE Health Institute Launches International Study Examining Motivations Behind Non-Sexual Nudity
- A Foundational Claim in Human Secrecy Goes Public
- Agape Leadership Academy Opens Nationwide Enrollment — State ESA Scholarships Cover Full Tuition for Families in 7 States
- Las Vegas Headliner Don Barnhart Brings National Touring Comedy Show to Comedy Cabana
- Nevada Boxing Hall of Fame Announces 14th Annual Induction Gala Weekend Honoring Classes of 2025 and 2026
- Brosix Celebrates 20 Years of Private Team Messaging for Small and Mid-Sized Businesses
- Top 15 Mosquito-Infested Cities in Louisiana and East Texas Ranked for 2026 Mosquito Season
- From Broken to Soaring Week 40
- Finnish Political Satire Film Generates 10,000+ Cross-Platform Interactions Following Gandalf Parody Video Across TikTok, YouTube and Telegram
- AI Is Making It Easier for API-First Platforms to Connect, Partner, Reach Customers, and Grow Revenue Faster
- 2026 Editorial Freelancers Association Conference Focuses on Building Sustainable Careers
- netElastic Powers LigaT's High-Performance Broadband Expansion and IPv6 Modernization in Portugal
- Raiku launches rkuSOL with Sanctum, Kamino, Loopscale and Exponent
- Greenland Mines Ltd (N A S D A Q: GRML) Advances Strategic Growth Initiatives as Critical Minerals Demand Accelerates
- Entering the $69 Billion Animal Health Market, Delivering Record Growth, AI-Driven Healthcare Innovation, and Targeting $200 Million Revenue by 2029
- $97.9 Million Q1 Revenue Growth Reinforces Transformation Into a Global AI & Digital Services Powerhouse: IQSTEL, Inc. (N A S D A Q: IQST)
- Boston Industrial Solutions Launches Natron® 348 UV Inkjet Ink for Epson S3200 Print Heads
- Heritage at South Brunswick Unveils Luxury Resort-Style Amenities Designed for Every Generation
- CAPHRA warns push for ASEAN vape ban ignores science
