Tobacco
Auckland Council invests in tobacco and booze
Auckland Council is being urged to immediately get rid of its investments in soft drink and tobacco companies, just days after it banned fizzy drinks from all its leisure centres. Audio
Tobacco industry pushes for crackdown on home-growers
The tobacco industry wants the government to crack down on what it says is a burgeoning black market in homegrown tobacco. Audio
Industry wants action on homegrown tobacco
Soaring cigarette prices are encouraging more people to grow their own tobacco. Tobacco companies are crying foul, saying people who grow their own have an unfair advantage because they don't get hit… Audio
Should TV shows showing smoking be restricted.
As the push to make New Zealand smoke free gathers steam a new study is suggesting that TV shows depicting smoking should be given an 'R' rating. Audio
Tobacco companies fume over plain packaging.
Tobacco companies are fuming over the Government's plans to wrap up their cigarettes in plain packets. Audio
Wellington launches wider smoking bans
Smokers in the capital will find fewer places to light up under a new Smokefree Action plan launched by Wellington City Council. The council was supporting the government's target of...
We're late on plain cigarette packs - Turia
New Zealand should have introduced plain cigarette packaging years ago, says the architect of the law, Dame Tariana Turia. Audio
Tobacco also 'an environmental issue'
A smoke-free advocacy group is calling for tobacco companies to be held legally responsible for parts of cigarettes that are unsafe for the environment.
Do taxes make you healthier?
Dr. Frank Chaloupka discusses the efficacy of tax control policies on tobacco, alcohol, and illicit drug use. He is a distinguished professor of economics at the University of Illinois at Chicago and… Audio
Late Edition for 20 August 2015
Four of this country's rarest birds are accidentally shot; the number of homeless pregnant women is increasing; and in Dateline Pacific, online help for victims of sexual violence in Papua New Guinea.
…'New low' by tobacco company in school survey grab
In Australia, a global tobacco company has attempted to use freedom of information laws to mine school surveys about children's attitudes to smoking and alcohol. Audio
Are "Big Tobacco" companies marketing cigarettes to teens?
A tobacco giant is trying to use freedom of information laws to obtain data from surveys of Victorian schoolchildren and teenagers revealing their attitudes towards smoking. Todd Harper is the Chief… Audio
Imperial Tobacco posts profits
The world's fifth largest cigarette maker, Imperial Tobacco, is proving there's still a lot of money to be made in the business. Audio
ASH responds to plain packing delay
Here at home, Parliament's health committee in August gave the green light to legislation to introduce plain packaging for cigarettes. The proposed legislation won't be passed until the legal… Audio
Uruguay defends big tobacco challenge
Uruguay is the second-smallest country in South America, with a population of just 3.4 million. It's in a David and Goliath fight against tobacco giant Philip Morris, based in Switzerland and maker of… Audio
England moves to introduce plain packaging
Dr Matthew Rimmer is an Associate Professor of Law at the Australian National University, an Australian Research Council future fellow with an interest in plain packaging. Audio
Zoey Martin-Hawke
Creating a Smoke free Aotearoa by 2025 is the mission of Te Ara Hā Ora Manager Zoey Martin-Hawke, helped along by the contribution of the former co-leader of the Māori Party, Dame Tariana Turia. As… Audio
Big tobacco's latest attempt to sway MPs against plain packaging
Dr Axel Gietz is Imperial Tobacco's Director of Group Corporate Affairs. Audio
David Cunliffe on the TPP and plain packaging
We speak to the Labour leader, David Cunliffe, who says big corporates want their profits put above public health. Audio
Tariana Turia on plain packaging and the TPP
New Zealand is a step closer to plain packaging of cigarettes - with legislation passing its first reading in Parliament with just one opposing vote. Audio