Maori urged to strike back at big tobacco
Media release: The Smokefree Coalition
3 December 2009
“We don't smoke the shit, we just sell it. We reserve the right to smoke for the young, the poor, the black and the
stupid.”
– The response of an R J Reynolds representative when asked why none of the company's executives smoked.
The Smokefree Coalition says a Maori Affairs Select Committee inquiry into the tobacco industry in Aotearoa is an
unprecedented opportunity for Maori to strike back at an industry that has robbed them of so many of their loved ones.
Submissions from the public are now being invited on the inquiry which will look closely at how the tobacco industry has
promoted tobacco use among Maori and the consequences tobacco use has had for Maori.
Smokefree Coalition Director Prudence Stone wants New Zealanders, and particularly Maori, to make submissions telling
the Select Committee of the devastating effects of tobacco use.
“For decades tobacco companies have literally gotten away with murder. They have deliberately marketed their killer
product to minorities and indigenous populations and then paid expensive lawyers to exploit legal loopholes and evade
responsibility,” Ms Stone says.
“This is an industry that causes the deaths of about 600 Maori and 5000 New Zealanders every year. We now have a
once-in-a-lifetime opportunity to call them to account, and this time they will have nowhere to hide.”
The terms of reference for the inquiry include examining the impact tobacco use has had on the health, economic, social
and cultural wellbeing of Maori, as well as on Maori development aspirations and opportunities.
Te Reo Marama Director Shane Kawanata Bradbrook says the inquiry offers Maori the opportunity to meet future
developmental aspirations that are currently being impeded by tobacco use, and that personal stories from smokers and
their families will help represent to the Committee the sickness and misery that is the reality of smoking.
“It is crucial that this Committee is provided with a clear and unequivocal picture of the harm tobacco use causes and
that New Zealanders, even those who smoke, resent the way tobacco companies have profited from their slick marketing of
addiction and death."
Te Hotu Manawa Maori Executive Director Moana Tane agreed that this was the perfect opportunity to show the Committee
first hand how Maori aspirations of whanau ora continue to be compromised by an unbridled and greedy tobacco industry.
“Every day in our work with Maori communities on marae around the country, we are confronted with the names and faces of
whanau who have passed away prematurely, through smoking-related diseases.
“Of particular concern to Te Hotu Manawa Maori are the lung cancer rates for Maori women that are jaw-dropping by
international standards. As whanau we want to move forward but the reality is we have big business working silently,
anonymously and unfettered, to keep us smoking."
The Smokefree Coalition, Te Reo Marama and Te Hotu Manawa Maori have organised seminars to assist health workers and
members of the public in making submissions. Seminars will be held in Auckland on 10 December and in Wellington on 14
December. Information about attending and an inquiry submission tool kit can be found on the Smokefree Coalition
(www.sfc.org.nz) and Te Reo Marama (www.tereomarama.co.nz) websites.
Submissions to the Maori Affairs Select Committee can be written, oral or made online at www.parliament.nz.
Submissions close on 29 January 2010.
ends