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'Life of an African is Substandard' to Tobacco Companies, Zambian Activist Sounds Alarm
'Life of an African is Substandard' to Tobacco Companies, Zambian Activist Sounds Alarm
Sputnik Africa
Leaked documents reveal the extent of meddlesomeness by Western multinational tobacco companies to systematically weaken anti-smoking laws and public health... 24.11.2025, Sputnik Africa
2025-11-24T17:33+0100
2025-11-24T17:33+0100
2025-11-24T17:33+0100
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'Life of an African is Substandard' to Tobacco Companies, Zambian Activist Sounds Alarm
Sputnik Africa
Leaked documents reveal the extent of meddlesomeness by Western multinational tobacco companies to systematically weaken anti-smoking laws and public health policies in several African nations, aiming to boost their sales in a growing market.
Tobacco's toll on Africa is escalating from a public health concern into a full-blown epidemic. The WHO African Region estimates roughly 146,000 annual deaths from tobacco-related disease and reports about 94 million male and 13 million female tobacco users on the continent, with roughly one in five adolescents using tobacco products—trends that, combined with rapid population growth and youth demographics, make Africa a critical frontier in the global tobacco epidemic. Tobacco claims over 7 million lives annually, including 1.6 million non-smokers caught in its smoke, while nearly 80 percent of the world’s 1.3 billion smokers live in low- and middle-income countries, where weak enforcement of anti-tobacco laws lets the epidemic silently deepen.Revealed reports now tie that crisis to deliberate corporate strategy. Investigations reveal that British American Tobacco (BAT) pursued a multi-pronged campaign to weaken public-health policies: lobbying in Kenya to delay or dilute graphic health warnings, urging Ugandan officials to reduce tobacco taxes, influencing Zambian policymakers to water down advertising restrictions, and funding front groups in Nigeria to challenge the science on second-hand smoke. At the same time, a new report—the 2025 Nigeria Tobacco Industry Interference Index by Corporate Accountability and Public Participation Africa (CAPPA)—underscores how tobacco corporations have deepened their foothold in Nigeria’s policy sphere. Nigeria’s interference score rose from 60 in 2023 to 62 in 2025, ranking it 54th globally, as the industry co-opts corporate social responsibility (CSR) programs, political relationships, and weak regulatory enforcement to protect and expand its market.For insight into how multinational tobacco firms like British American Tobacco weaken African public health regulations for profit, African Currents turned to Master Chimbala, a campaigner with Save Zambia From Tobacco.Want to hear more from our guest? Catch the full conversation on the African Currents podcast, brought to you by Sputnik Africa.You’ll find our episodes not just on the website, but also on Telegram.► You can also stream our podcast on Apple Podcasts, Spotify, Deezer, Pocket Casts, Afripods, Podcast Addict.► Check out all the episodes of African Currents.
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'Life of an African is Substandard' to Tobacco Companies, Zambian Activist Sounds Alarm
Leaked documents reveal the extent of meddlesomeness by Western multinational tobacco companies to systematically weaken anti-smoking laws and public health policies in several African nations, aiming to boost their sales in a growing market.
Tobacco's toll on Africa is escalating from a public health concern into a full-blown epidemic. The WHO African Region estimates roughly 146,000 annual deaths from tobacco-related disease and reports about 94 million male and 13 million female tobacco users on the continent, with roughly one in five adolescents using tobacco products—trends that, combined with rapid population growth and youth demographics, make Africa a critical frontier in the global tobacco epidemic. Tobacco claims over 7 million lives annually, including 1.6 million non-smokers caught in its smoke, while nearly 80 percent of the world’s 1.3 billion smokers live in low- and middle-income countries, where weak enforcement of anti-tobacco laws lets the epidemic silently deepen.
Revealed reports now tie that crisis to deliberate corporate strategy. Investigations reveal that British American Tobacco (BAT) pursued a multi-pronged campaign to weaken public-health policies: lobbying in Kenya to delay or dilute graphic health warnings, urging Ugandan officials to reduce tobacco taxes, influencing Zambian policymakers to water down advertising restrictions, and funding front groups in Nigeria to challenge the science on second-hand smoke. At the same time, a new report—the 2025 Nigeria Tobacco Industry Interference Index by Corporate Accountability and Public Participation Africa (CAPPA)—underscores how tobacco corporations have deepened their foothold in Nigeria’s policy sphere. Nigeria’s interference score rose from 60 in 2023 to 62 in 2025, ranking it 54th globally, as the industry co-opts corporate social responsibility (CSR) programs, political relationships, and weak regulatory enforcement to protect and expand its market.
For insight into how multinational tobacco firms like British American Tobacco weaken African public health regulations for profit, African Currents turned to Master Chimbala, a campaigner with Save Zambia From Tobacco.
"The population of Africa is very young, predominantly young, Zambia let alone [...]. When it comes to public health, you cannot be selective in implementing laws. The harm and danger that tobacco causes in any form at any location of the world will be the same anywhere in the world. There is no reason why the strictness that will exist in the United Kingdom should be higher. And in my little country of Zambia and beautiful continent of Africa, should be more poor, should be reduced, should be compromised, should be diluted. There's no reason. Because the statement is correct. The life of an African is substandard, is less, is mediocre according to the mind of the tobacco companies. It means that they do not believe that our lives are worthwhile in comparison to the lives of the people in the Western world, because the rules there are serious and they respect them," Chimbala expressed.
Want to hear more from our guest? Catch the full conversation on the African Currents podcast, brought to you by Sputnik Africa.
You’ll find our episodes not just on the website, but also on
Telegram.► Check out all the episodes of African Currents.