Global Tobacco Control Conference will inaugurated by Union Health Minister J P Nadda in Greater Noida.
New Delhi:
India is set to host the global tobacco control conference today for the first time, where it will push for incorporating smokeless tobacco as an agenda amid a presence of delegates from about 180 countries.
The Seventh Session of the Conference of Parties (COP7) to World Health Organisation (WHO) Framework Convention on Tobacco Control (FCTC) to be held from November 7 to 12 at Greater Noida.
Sri Lankan President Maithripala Sirisena will be the special invited speaker at the conference, which will be inaugurated by Union Health Minister J P Nadda, Health Ministry officials said.
Noting that there is a large number of people in India who are increasingly opting for smokeless form of tobacco, they said the country's effort will be to put it on the agenda of FCTC.
India has already implemented 85 per cent pictorial warning on tobacco products, but the issue of plain packaging, that refers to packaging that requires the removal of all branding "will still be on the mind" during the deliberations at the conference, they added.
About 1,500 delegates are expected to participate in the conference from around 180 countries along with other observers in official relations with the WHO FCTC Secretariat in Geneva.
India has provided a leadership role in the negotiations of FCTC and has also served as the regional coordinator for the South-East Asia Region.
India ratified the treaty on February 27, 2005 and is obligated to comply with the treaty provisions and its guidelines to reduce tobacco consumption globally.
It is the first occasion that a COP meeting is being held in India and signals a strong commitment of the government to increase international co-operation and awareness of the WHO FCTC globally and especially in the WHO South-East Asia Region, the Health Ministry said.
The WHO FCTC is the first global evidence-based public health treaty that recognises the right of all people to the highest standard of health.
The treaty was developed by countries in response to the globalisation of the tobacco epidemic. There are at present 180 parties to the Convention.