WHO Announces Regional Health Awards
WP/NP/16
30 May 2002
Cambodia's national football team, a government unit in a Pacific island, a health council in New Zealand, and a badminton coach and a sports administrator from China have won health awards from the World Health Organization's Western Pacific Region*.
The awards recognize efforts to promote
tobacco-free sports. They mark World No Tobacco Day on May
31, which has the theme this year of "Tobacco-Free Sports,
Play it Clean!"
WHO is campaigning to clean sports of
all tobacco advertising and sponsorship and to get sports
bodies to implement smoke-free policies. All the evidence
shows that the tobacco industry's powerful marketing, which
reaches most stadiums in the Region, encourages children to
start smoking. Currently, one in five young teens smokes
worldwide; tens of thousands more start smoking every
day.
In presenting these five health awards, WHO is
acknowledging the leadership shown in creating tobacco-free
sports by the nominated organizations and
individuals.
The award winners are:
Cambodia's national football team, for promoting
tobacco-free sports and for not accepting tobacco
sponsorship, a remarkable move in a country where tobacco
advertising is highly lucrative and pervasive.
Kiribati Ministry of Health, Health education unit ? for seeking to change the strong cultural use of tobacco, most notably in getting sports equipment to replace tobacco in the traditional gift exchange, mweaka.
New Zealand's Health Sponsorship Council ? for replacing tobacco sponsorship of sport and for helping to promote tobacco-free sports.
Mr Zhang Faqiang, Deputy Administrator, State Sport General Administration of China, for efforts to institute tobacco control within China's sports administration and for his involvement in anti-smoking groups.
Mr Li Yongpo, Head Coach of China's national badminton team, for his ardent anti-smoking campaign that has reached into the team's training centres and for his refusal to participate in tobacco promotion.
"The award winners have tried to
kick tobacco out of sports," said WHO's Western Pacific
Regional Director Dr Shigeru Omi. "In doing so, they have
made a contribution towards health."
The Cambodian
national football team and New Zealand's Health Sponsorship
Council have demonstrated that sports can say "no" to
tobacco money. Two Chinese sporting figures, Zhang Faqiang
and Li Yongpo, have shown that individuals do make a
difference. And the Pacific island of Kiribati has shown
that old habits don't have to die-hard, culture can be
changed to become more healthy.
"These award winners
show that the efforts of a single person or organization can
go a long way in the battle against tobacco," said Dr Harley
Stanton, from WHO's Tobacco-Free Initiative in the Western
Pacific Region.
Tobacco is the world's leading killer.
Every half a minute, it kills someone in WHO's Western
Pacific Region, which covers East Asia and the Pacific. By
2030, smoking will kill one in six people worldwide, a toll
that will exceed that from AIDS, tuberculosis, automobile
accidents and homicide combined.
Despite the huge health toll, tobacco sponsorship in sports is at a peak, involving hundreds of millions of dollars every year. By linking tobacco with sports, the industry is linking a product which kills with activities that are healthy, exciting, and associated with youth. There are still limited regulations against tobacco advertising and even less control on sponsorship in the Region.
However, through
the efforts of anti-tobacco campaigners, the links between
sports and tobacco are slowly being broken.
The Indian
national cricket team, Viet Nam's football team and South
African cricket have all recently ended sponsorship by
tobacco companies. They demonstrate that sports can do
without tobacco money.
Australia ended all tobacco
sponsorship in 1996. Since then, sponsorship revenues have
doubled to $700 million annually in 2000, a figure that does
not even include the 2000 Olympics.
Leading sports
organizations are also supporting WHO's tobacco-free sports
campaign, such as the Fédération Internationale de Football
Association (FIFA) and the International Olympic
Committee.
This year's 2002 FIFA World Cup in Korea
and Japan is tobacco-free, all seated areas in the stadium
are smoke-free and there is no tobacco sponsorship. The
kick-off on May 31 coincides with WHO's World No Tobacco
Day.
DETAILS OF AWARD WINNERS:
Ø Cambodian National Football Team
The team volunteered to be part of a national programme to promote tobacco-free sports, with supporting posters and video spots. The team itself is non-smoking and free of tobacco sponsorship. In a country where tobacco is a $50 million business and tobacco advertising is endemic, (making up about half of all street advertising), the team is setting an excellent example to others.
Ø The Health Sponsorship Council of New Zealand
HSC was set up in 1990 to promote health and to replace tobacco sponsorship. It undertakes a large number of sponsorships each year with its Smokefree brand.
It has worked with
sports associations and clubs to produce smoke-free sports,
and has worked to make netball, surfing, karate and rugby
smoke-free. It has been very successful in promoting a
smoke-free culture.
Other activities include drawing
up a comprehensive guide for sports clubs, setting up an
0800 free phone line, producing branded merchandise and
choosing role models for the young. HSC serves as an
excellent model for other countries to follow.
Ø Ministry of Health, Kiribati
In this Pacific nation, there is a tradition of giving gifts, known as mweaka, at community events. All visitors also traditionally offer gifts to village elders to signify goodwill. In the past, cigarettes were popular as mweaka.
The Ministry of
Health, working with WHO, began a programme which encouraged
sports equipment to replace tobacco as mweaka. Soccer balls
are now the gift of choice over tobacco. Reducing the
cultural and social acceptability of smoking, a strong
cultural habit, is an important step in the fight against
tobacco. The efforts of this Pacific island also show that
old habits can be broken.
Ø Mr Zhang Faqiang, Deputy Administrator, China's State Sport General Administration
An enthusiastic supporter of tobacco control, Mr Zhang has long been active in the Chinese Association on Smoking and Health (CASH), serving as its vice-president since 1990. He has helped promote a ban on smoking in public places and has emphasized tobacco control within the State Sport General Administration. This year, he helped organize a newsletter on smoke-free sports in China. He has also encouraged athletes and coaches to become role models for tobacco control.
Ø Mr Li Yongpo, Head Coach, Chinese National Badminton Team
A coach for one of the most popular sports in China, Mr Li is noted for producing a number of world champions in badminton. He is also noted as an advocate for the campaign against tobacco. He has banned smoking in public places such as training centres and stadiums and forbids his own athletes to smoke. He has also refused to promote tobacco or appear in any tobacco advertising. His own rule on smoking is, "don't smoke, don't give cigarettes to others and advise smokers to quit".
*The 37 countries and areas comprising
the WHO Western Pacific Region are: American Samoa,
Australia, Brunei Darussalam, Cambodia, China,
Cook
Islands, Fiji, French Polynesia, Guam, Hong Kong
(China), Japan, Kiribati, Lao People's Democratic Republic,
Macao (China), Malaysia, Marshall
Islands, Federated
States of Micronesia, Mongolia, Nauru, New Caledonia, New
Zealand, Niue, Northern Mariana Islands, Palau, Papua New
Guinea,
Philippines, Pitcairn Islands, Republic of Korea,
Samoa, Singapore, Solomon Islands, Tokelau, Tonga, Tuvalu,
Vanuatu, Viet Nam, and Wallis and Futuna.
For more
information, call (63 2) 528 9991 to 93 or email:
PIO_Unit@wpro.who.int