Tobacco Companies Just Got Burnt After Historic Vote For Deadly Dull Cigarette Box Law

Commons Approve Bill To Standardise Cigarette Packaging
File photo dated 18/03/14 of cigarettes as the tobacco industry is financially linked to the majority of studies showing negative impacts of standardised packaging, a report claims.
File photo dated 18/03/14 of cigarettes as the tobacco industry is financially linked to the majority of studies showing negative impacts of standardised packaging, a report claims.
Chris Radburn/PA Wire

The days of the Marlboro man are well and truly over.

From next year every single packet of cigarettes sold in the UK will look the same after MPs backed historic changes in the law.

Standardised packaging for cigarettes should faces its final hurdle in the House of Lords next week which means boxes of smokes will carry only the brand name and the make, alongside a raft of graphic photos accompanying health warnings.

In a free vote, 367 MPs voted in favour of enforcing the law, with 113 against. The vote comes just weeks after a similar decision was made by the government of the Irish Republic, while Australia has enforced plain packaging since 2012.

But the battle against cigarette producers hasn't quite been stubbed out as British American Tobacco will launch a legal challenge if the Lords support today's vote.

Jerome Abelman, Corporate & Regulatory Affairs Director, said: “Legal action is not something we want to undertake, nor is it something we enter into lightly - but the UK Government has left us with no other choice."

Action on Smoking and Health (Ash) celebrated the decision, which they said would protect the next generation from taking up the habit.

Meanwhile, the British Heart Foundation (BHF) described the move as a "landmark victory that will save thousands of lives".

Chief executive Simon Gillespie said: "This is a landmark victory. Too many families are devastated every year by losing a loved one to the deadly consequences of smoking."

He pointed out that the vote coincides with No Smoking Day, a BHF campaign to encourage smokers to try to quit.

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