http://www.gulf-times.com/site/topics/printArticle.asp?cu_no=2&item_no=269380&version=1&template_id=45&parent_id=25


Anger over Indonesia fatwa on smoking

Publish Date: Thursday,29 January, 2009, at 12:24 PM Doha Time


JAKARTA: Indonesian smokers and the country's tobacco industry have slammed a 
move by the nation's top Islamic body to place restrictions on tobacco use by 
Muslims, calling it an interference in private lives.
Health campaigners welcomed the move, but said the government now needed to do 
more if there was to be any impact on curbing smoking in the world's fifth 
largest tobacco market.
While stopping short of an outright ban, the Ulema Council, or MUI, issued a 
fatwa at the weekend prohibiting smoking in public places or by pregnant women 
and children.

"I am angry about the fatwa, because both my father and grandfather are smokers 
and the new fatwa now makes them sinners," said Abdul Hardiyanto, 38, a Muslim 
stock broker. Fatwas are not legally binding in the world's most populous 
Muslim nation, but there is pressure to adhere to them or be regarded as sinful.

Smoking is widespread in Indonesia, with cigarettes among the cheapest in the 
world at around $1 a pack and the nation famous for its traditional sweet 
smelling clove cigarettes known as "kretek". "Is MUI playing God here?" 
questioned Adhitya Wisena.
"I am going to keep smoking, because religion must stay away from this matter. 
We have government regulation for this kind of thing," added Wisena, 33, a 
Muslim who works in a fish shop.

Some cities in Indonesia, including Jakarta, have banned smoking in public 
places, but the rules are widely flouted.
Many Indonesians also have a strong cultural affinity with smoking, with 
pressure to hang out and smoke after celebrations for births or weddings in 
villages across the archipelago.
"If you have money, you can buy cigarettes for yourself. If I have my own 
money, nobody can stop me," said Dewi Astuti, a 36-year-old Muslim woman.

The fatwa has also been condemned by the country's tobacco business and 
Indonesia's finance ministry estimated that it could trigger a drop in 
cigarette output of 5-10% in 2009.

Between 1960-2005, cigarette production jumped more than six-fold to 220bn 
sticks, the industry ministry said.
 The edict will hurt tobacco growers as consumption falls, the chairman of the 
Tobacco Farmers' Association in the Jember district of East Java told the 
Antara news agency.

The $8bn tobacco industry in Indonesia plays an important economic role, with 
tax on cigarettes accounting for about 10% of government income in the past, 
while the sectors providemns of jobs.
Indonesia's national commission on child protection welcomed the fatwa, 
although said the government should do more.
It urged Indonesia in a statement to ratify the World Health Organisation's 
Framework Convention on Tobacco Control.
The FCTC aims to reduce tobacco consumption, including through a ban on 
advertising and promotion, but Indonesia has been reluctant to sign up because 
of concerns about the impact on the economy despite the health risks from 
smoking.-Reuters

[Non-text portions of this message have been removed]

Kirim email ke