Tobacco
makes education possible in China – health miss-hap or educational success?
In
September 2011 North America realized that in dozens of rural villages in China’s
western provinces, tobacco made children's education possible.
The
gates of these schools has a slogan which translated to “genius comes from hard
work – Tobacco helps you become talented”
The school, which was built by the
local tobacco company after a deadly earthquake in 2008, also bears the green
leaf logo of China Tobacco, the country's all-powerful state-controlled
monopoly, on its parapet.
China Tobacco is the world's largest
manufacturer of tobacco products, with over 900 brands, and is owned by the
Chinese government. China is the world's largest tobacco market and as many as
60 per cent of its men smoke.
Anti-smoking campaigners described
the sponsorship deals as “sickening” and “shocking”, and noted they broke the
World Health Organization’s Framework Convention on Tobacco Control, which
China ratified in 2005
Cary Adams, chief executive of the
Union for International Cancer Control, said: “Having just concluded a historic
UN summit on non-communicable diseases where tobacco was highlighted as crucial
to lessening the global burden of cancer, it is both shocking and disheartening
to hear reports of such disregard for the health of so many young people…Governments
need to be in the business of helping their citizens, not propelling this
epidemic further.”
Smoking among women in China is
currently low compared to that of men. But tobacco industry sponsorship of
primary schools is a revoltingly blatant means of recruiting young girls, as
well as boys, to a life of addiction to a deadly drug\
Around 1.2 million of China’s 300
million smokers died every year from smoking-related diseases, a figure
expected to triple by 2030.
There are now 16 million smokers
under the age of 15 in China, 6.3 per cent of the youth population, according
to the Chinese government.
Meanwhile, a survey of 12,000
schoolchildren by Peking University last year found that almost a third of boys
between 13 and 15 have tried smoking and that the average age Chinese smokers
have their first cigarette is 10.
Many of the primary schools funded by
tobacco companies are part of China's Hope project, a charity that has rolled
out schools in the countryside for the poor. Parents seem to be very supportive
of the tobacco companies. They think they are giving something back to society,
but they are just using charity as a front.
Tobacco companies have also built a
network of libraries in the countryside, including at least 42 primary school
libraries in Xinjiang and 40 in Tibet. They also widely sponsor school sports
events and entertainment shows.
Inside the schools, they often have
branded uniforms and distribute cigarette-shaped sweets. Vendors near the
school gates usually sell cigarettes one-by-one, rather than in packets.
Last year, the Ministry of Education
banned all advertisements for tobacco on the campuses of Chinese schools, but
have found it difficult to implement the regulation on Hope schools, which are
administered by another arm of the Chinese government.
Shackling the tobacco industry has
proved next to impossible for the Chinese government, which relies on it for a
huge slice of its tax revenues.
In some tobacco growing provinces,
such as Yunnan, the industry generates more than 40 per cent of the local
government tax take.
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