The Graphic Health Warnings Law
On July 15, 2014, President Aquino has signed into law Republic Act Number 10643 or otherwise known as "The Graphic Health Warnings Law. This act shall effectively instill health consciousness through graphic health warnings on tobacco products.
If this law shall not be complied with, a sale of any cigarette or tobacco product shall not be allowed by any person or any legal entity.
The reasons why this Act was enacted are:
1. To have Graphic Health Warnings that effectively warn of the devastating effects of tobacco use and exposure to second hand smoke;
2. To remove misleading or deceptive numbers or descriptions like "low tar", "light", "ultra lights" or "mild" which convey or tend to convey that a product or variant is healthier, less harmful or safer; and
3. To further promote the right to health and information of the people.
As defined in the Act, "Graphic Health Warnings" refer to the photographic image printed on the tobacco product package which accurately depicts the hazards of tobacco use and is accompanied by textual warning related to the picture.
“Tobacco Product Package” means the packet and package of tobacco
products and any outside packaging and labelling of tobacco products for
sale and distribution in the domestic market, importation, trade,
exchange, or for exhibition, such as, but not limited to, packs, tins,
boxes, pouches, flip-tops, slide and shell packages, cartons, packages
containing one (1) product unit, or other containers of tobacco products
containing the logo or trademark of the tobacco companies, primarily
intended for consumers or for retail sale: Provided, That for
mastercases that contain the logo or trademark of tobacco brands, such
mastercases shall contain the textual health warning “SMOKING KILLS”
which shall be printed in the same single color and in bold print as the
trademark logo: Provided, further, That textual health
warnings shall be of equal prominence and visibility as the logo or
trademark of tobacco companies. Such textual warnings on the mastercase
shall occupy not more than fifty percent (50%) of each principal display
panel of the mastercase.
“Tobacco Products” means products entirely or partly made of leaf
tobacco as raw material, which are manufactured to be used for smoking,
sucking, chewing or snuffing, or by any other means of consumption.
As provided in this Act, it is only applicable to tobacco products that are locally manufactured or imported
and introduced in the Philippine market. Cigarettes intended or offered
for export shall only be subject to the requirement that one (1) side
panel of the mastercases, reams/cartons, and one (1) side panel of each
cigarette pack primarily intended for retail sale to consumers, shall
contain the following markings and information: “For sale only in
______”, “Made under authority of______”, tax number assigned by the
Bureau of Internal Revenue (BIR) to the domestic manufacturer that
exports tobacco products and fiscal and regulatory marking requirements
of the country where the tobacco products will be ultimately sold.
Graphic Health Warnings – One
(1) year after the issuance of the templates by the Department of
Health (DOH), cigarette packages and other tobacco product packages,
including package inserts and onserts, and any outside packaging and
labelling, withdrawn from the manufacturing facilities, or imported into
the Philippine customs territory shall bear the prescribed highly
visible full-color Graphic Health Warnings, that shall have two (2)
components: a photographic picture warning and an accompanying textual
warning that is related to the picture.
(a) The Graphic Health Warnings shall be
printed on fifty percent (50%) of the principal display surfaces of any
tobacco package; it shall occupy fifty percent (50%) of the front and
fifty percent (50%) of the back panel of the packaging;
(b) The Graphic Health Warnings shall be located at the lower portions of the said panels or Principal Display Areas;
(c) Nothing shall be printed or applied
on a location where it is likely to obscure or cover, in part or in
whole, the Graphic Health Warnings or the location where the internal
revenue strip stamp is to be affixed as may be required by the BIR;
(d) No part of the warning may be
obliterated, obscured, folded, severed or become unreadable when the
tobacco package is opened or closed or when a wrapper on the package is
removed;
(e) The Graphic Health Warnings shall be
printed in four colors /-cmyk-/ screen 133 lines per inch based on a
source file of 300 dpi;
(f) The printing of the Graphic Health
Warnings shall be done using current available technology for purposes
of providing vivid and realistic pictures, without the use of any
border, frame or any other design that will effectively lessen the size
of the warning;
The Graphic Health Warnings shall be
printed or inscribed on the package in a color which contrasts
conspicuously with the background of the package or its labels;
(g) A maximum of twelve (12) templates
of Graphic Health Warnings shall be printed simultaneously and these
shall be rotated periodically for each brand family and also for each
variant, so that every twenty-four (24) months, the variations of the
warnings shall appear in the market with approximately equal frequency
and equal display of health warnings and messages on retail packages;
and
(h) Graphic Health Warnings specifications –
(1) The text warning
accompanying the photographic picture warning shall be worded in such
manner that an ordinary layman will understand what the picture is about
and what the ill-effects of smoking are on the health of the smoker and
on the people around him;
(2) The text warning
shall be placed on areas of the photograph where it will not obscure
the picture itself but will be prominently displayed;
(3) The text shall
use no more than twenty percent (20%) of the entire area of the Graphic
Health Warnings and shall appear in clearly legible type and in contrast
by typograph, layout and color, without the use of any border, frame or
any other design that will effectively lessen the size of the textual
warning; and
(4) The accompanying
text shall be printed in Filipino on the front panel and English on the
back panel. In the case of other containers where there is only one (1)
external surface area, the accompanying text will alternately be in
English or Filipino.
Penalties for Noncompliance.
(a) The following penalties shall
individually apply to manufacturers, importers, and distributors of
tobacco products as well as their agents/representatives for any
violation of Sections 6 and 7, and Section 11 insofar as they
are responsible for providing display materials that are in violation of
this Act:
(1) On the first offense, a fine of not more than Five hundred thousand pesos (P500,000.00);
(2) On the second offense, a fine of not more than One million pesos (P1,000,000.00); and
(3) On the third
offense, a fine of not more than Two million pesos (P2,000,000.00) or
imprisonment of not more than five (5) years, or both, at the discretion
of the court: Provided, That the business permits and licenses, in the case of a business entity or establishment shall be revoked or cancelled.
If the guilty officer is a foreign
national, he shall be deported after service of sentence and/or payment
of applicable fines without need of further deportation proceedings and
shall be permanently barred from re-entering the Philippines.
Each withdrawal or importation into the
Philippine customs territory of noncompliant tobacco packages,
regardless of size, for sale to the market, after the compliance date
shall constitute one (1) offense. An additional penalty of One hundred
thousand pesos (P100,000.00) per day shall be imposed for each day the
violation continues after having received the order from the Department
of Trade and Industry (DTI) notifying the company of the infraction.
(b) The following penalties shall
individually apply to retailers/sellers of tobacco products as well as
their agents/ representatives for any violation of Sections 6 and 7 of
this Act, insofar as they are involved in the display, offering for sale
and selling of the covered products, as well as Section 11 of this Act:
(1) On the first offense, a fine of not more than Ten thousand pesos (P10,000.00);
(2) On the second offense, a fine of not more than Fifty thousand pesos (P50,000.00); and
(3) On the third
offense, a fine of not more than One hundred thousand pesos
(P100,000.00) or imprisonment of not more than one (1) year, or both, at
the discretion of the court. The business permits and licenses, in the
case of a business entity or establishment shall be revoked or
cancelled.
Each day that noncompliant tobacco
packages are found in the retail establishments of the retailers after
the compliance date shall constitute one (1) offense. An additional
penalty of Five thousand pesos (P5,000.00), per day shall be imposed for
each day the violation continues after having received the order from
the DTI notifying the retailers of the infraction.
(c) The imposition of the fines shall
take into consideration the annual gross sales, capital investment and
employee size of the manufacturers, importers and distributors, and in
the case of retailers and sellers, their total assets.
Source: Official Gazette of the Republic of the Philippines.
Note: The pictures here are taken from Google. They are not owned by the blogger.
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