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France to ban smoking in most public places

France said on Sunday it will ban smoking in most public places from next February and in bars, restaurants, hotels and night clubs 11 months later.
/ Source: Reuters

France said on Sunday it will ban smoking in most public places from next February and in bars, restaurants, hotels and night clubs 11 months later.

“We have decided to ban smoking in public places from Feb. 1, 2007,” Prime Minister Dominique de Villepin told RTL radio and LCI television.

The familiar “bar-tabacs”, special bars that sell tobacco, night clubs and other such places would have until Jan. 1, 2008 at the latest to comply with the rules, he said.

Public places include stations, museums, government offices and shops but the ban will not extend to the streets or private places such as houses or hotel rooms.

Villepin said the state would provide for one-third of the costs of anti-smoking treatments, such as patches.

“That would represent the first month of treatment,” he said.

In a report presented on Wednesday, several parliamentarians called for a total ban from Sept. 1, 2007 at the latest, without exception. But a smoking ban will cause problems for the many tobacco shops in France.

Villepin declined to comment on the impact it would have on government tax revenues, saying public health considerations outweighed any such fiscal impact.

In the report, the parliamentarians said each year between 2,500 and 5,800 people died of the consequences of passive smoking, inhaling the smoke of smokers.

Around a quarter of the adult population smokes in France and some 66,000 smokers die each year.

Polls regularly show that a majority of French people support a ban on smoking in public places.

Weakened by a battle with trade unions and students over a controversial youth jobs contract, the government backed away in April from a ban on smoking in bars and restaurants to avoid a clash with France’s many smokers and tobacconists.

Ireland imposed the world’s first nationwide public smoking ban in 2004. Italy, Sweden, Scotland, Norway and Spain have followed suit to varying degrees.

Belgium, Britain, Northern Ireland and Portugal are expected to put new tighter rules in place next year.