Campaign materials
Statement by WHO Regional Director Dr Ahmed Al-Mandhari
Billboards
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Infographic
Press release: stop tobacco industry exploitation of children and young people
This year’s WHO’s World No Tobacco Day campaign focuses on protecting children and young people from exploitation by the tobacco and related industry. The toolkit has a set of classroom activities including one that puts the students in the shoes of the tobacco industry to make them aware of how the industry tries to manipulate them into using deadly products. It also includes an educational video, myth-buster quiz, and homework assignments.
Social cards
Videos
The secret's out #TobaccoExposed
This year’s World No Tobacco Day 2020 campaign will debunk myths and expose devious tactics employed by the tobacco industry. It will provide young people with the knowledge required to easily detect industry manipulation and equip them with the tools to rebuff such tactics, thereby empowering them to stand up against them.
Every four seconds, tobacco takes another life. The tobacco industry has been hooking generations of users to nicotine and tobacco for decades by using deceptive and devious tactics. This has given rise to the global epidemic we are experiencing right now.
So what happens next? The tobacco industry needs to replace these users. It also doesn’t hurt to pick up some new ones along the way so that the tobacco industry can keep its multi-billion dollar business alive. So what’s the latest and greatest ploy from the industry thus far?
The tobacco industry is working to convince the world that it is shifting its portfolio to a new set of products that can help drive smoking rates down. The tobacco industry and other players have introduced nicotine products that are particularly popular with children and adolescents. They are making these products attractive to them and are hooking them through different flavours, promotions, free samples, advertising, product placement in movies and TV shows, social media and influencers.
The future of this new generation is being threatened by the tobacco industry and other players.