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Alicia Keys Sets Example
for Entertainment Industry by Withdrawing Tobacco
Sponsorship of Indonesia Concert
Marketwatch
July 28, 2008
WASHINGTON, July 28, 2008 /PRNewswire-USNewswire via
COMTEX/ -- The following is a statement of Matthew L.
Myers, President, Campaign for Tobacco-Free Kids:
U.S. singing star Alicia Keys has set a positive example
that should be followed by musicians and entertainers
worldwide by demanding the withdrawal of tobacco
industry sponsorship of her July 31 concert in Jakarta,
Indonesia. We applaud Ms. Keys for taking quick action
to disassociate herself from the tobacco industry and to
prevent her name, image and talent from continuing to be
used to market cigarettes to children. It is critical
that the tobacco company involved, Philip Morris
International/Sampoerna, and concert promoters
immediately end the sponsorship and all tobacco-related
marketing and branding associated with the concert.
We call on all involved in the music and entertainment
industry, including performers and promoters, to follow
Alicia Keys' example and adopt policies of rejecting all
tobacco sponsorship and other tobacco promotions. We
also call on tobacco companies to immediately cease all
such sponsorships and promotions.
The World Health Organization's international tobacco
control treaty, the Framework Convention on Tobacco
Control, requires ratifying nations to ban all tobacco
advertising, promotions and sponsorships. Nations should
act quickly to implement this critical provision of the
treaty. Even before they do, tobacco companies should
immediately cease such sponsorships and promotions,
including sporting as well as entertainment events.
In the United States, Philip Morris USA and other major
tobacco companies are prohibited from engaging in brand
name sponsorships of concerts under a 1998 legal
settlement with the states. However, in developing
countries, tobacco companies continue to sponsor
concerts by famous musicians as a means to market
cigarettes to children and to circumvent restrictions on
more traditional tobacco advertising.
Alicia Keys' Jakarta concert had been sponsored and
heavily advertised by Philip Morris International and
its Indonesian subsidiary Sampoerna. According to giant
billboards posted in Jakarta (see photos at
www.tobaccofreekids.org/aliciakeys), the concert was
billed as "A Mild Live Production". "A Mild" is a
cigarette brand produced by Sampoerna. The billboards
feature a large photo of Alicia Keys, the logo for "A
Mild" cigarettes and a large health warning that states,
"Smoking can cause cancer, heart attacks, impotence and
harm pregnancy and fetal development."
The Alicia Keys concert is not the only current example
of Philip Morris International being involved in the
sponsorship or promotion of concerts by well-known
musicians. In the Philippines, those seeking tickets to
an August 30 reunion concert of the famous Filipino band
Eraserheads are being directed to www.marlboro.ph, a web
site run by Philip Morris International's Philippines
subsidiary. The Eraserheads have been called the
"Beatles of the Philippines" and the reunion concert has
generated enormous online buzz that often mentions the
Marlboro web site, generating positive publicity for the
world's best-selling cigarette brand. Philippines
authorities should investigate whether marketing for
this concert violates a national law that, as of July 1,
2008, bans tobacco sponsorships and all forms of tobacco
advertising in mass media, including the Internet.
These concert sponsorships and promotions indicate that
Philip Morris International continues to engage in
cigarette marketing that attracts children, especially
in developing countries where the company may think it
can escape public scrutiny. We urge Philip Morris to
immediately end all such sponsorships and promotions in
all countries, not just when it is caught red-handed as
it was in Indonesia.
Last week, international public health advocates called
on Alicia Keys to withdraw tobacco industry sponsorship
of the Jakarta concert and condemned Philip Morris
International for sponsoring the concert as a way of
marketing cigarettes to children.
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