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Memo to HK smokers: Cough up


story.smoking.jpg
A 2001 Hong Kong anti-smoking poster uses a manipulated image of the burning World Trade Center.
YOUR E-MAIL ALERTS
Hong Kong
South China Morning Post Limited
Government
Smoking

HONG KONG, China -- Hong Kong smokers beware -- your legislators haven't finished with you just yet.

Smokers in the "City of Life" may soon be issued with on-the-spot fines for lighting up in designated smoke-free areas.

If implemented, the penalties would complement Hong Kong's imminent bans of smoking in work places, bars and restaurants -- to be enforced in 2006.

At present, people who break anti-smoking laws can be fined HK$5,000 ($640) and summoned to court.

But an on-the-spot fine system would help avoid legal actions.

"People would be caught more easily with a simple system like fixed penalties so it would be a stronger deterrent," Hong Kong legislator Lee Cheuk-yan was quoted as saying in the South China Morning Post newspaper.

Secretary for Health, Welfare & Food Dr York Chow backed the legislator, saying added measures could help turn Hong Kong into a smoke-free city.

"The Government has no plan to change the existing HK$5,000 penalty for people who smoke in non-smoking areas ... (but) proposals such as a fixed-penalty system will be considered," he said on the government Web site news.gov.hk.

In recent years, Hong Kong has become increasingly serious about its anti-smoking drive, including using images of the burning World Trade Center in a 2001 advertising campaign.


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