New Laws Set to Turn the Screws on Smoking in South Africa

Cigarette butts
Source: Pawel Czerwinski on Unsplash

New legislation will soon place further curbs on tobacco smoking in South Africa – and these laws will also now extend to e-cigarettes. In South Africa, lung cancer is the third most common cancer among men and seventh for women. More than two-thirds of lung cancer patients are diagnosed at an advanced stage, resulting in poorer outcomes for treatment.

The proposed laws impose harsher penalties against smoking in smoke-free zones, being punishable with a fine or up to three months imprisonment. More areas would be designated smoke-free zones, essentially ending the smoking sections currently set aside for restaurants and bars. This would also extend to the homes of people who employ domestic workers – the employers would not be able to smoke while those workers are present.

Smoking would also be banned in homes used for teaching, tutoring and commercial childcare. Shared residences would also have smoking banned in common areas, as would smoking in vehicles with occupants under the age of 18.

Cigarette packaging will also be targeted, with a move to plain packaging with graphic health warnings. It will no longer be legal to sell cigarettes through vending machines, nor display cigarettes at the point of sale. Sweets and toys resembling cigarettes would also be banned – however, the sugar ‘cigarettes’ that many may remember from their youth are already banned.

Vaping and e-cigarette products will also be liable to the same legislation, and are also soon to have an excise tax levied upon them.