- Mumbai terror attack: US expects Pakistan to help in probe
- UN looks to new sources to finance climate change combat
- Obama assures India of steadfast support in fighting terror
- Iraq attacks leave 31 dead, 47 injured
- Suicide attack kills eight Afghan civilians, two cops
- Obama names Clinton Secretary of State, keeps Gates at defence
Now, buy fags a mile high, courtesy Qantas
Melbourne, July 16 (ANI): A move by Australia's national airliner Qantas to resume in-flight cigarette sales, has been criticised by the anti-tobacco lobby as a "greedy cash grab'' at the expense of good health.
Qantas reintroduced tobacco sales on board this month, almost a decade after they were stopped, reports news.
-
E-mail Article
Printer Friendly
Text-Size

com.au.
Legislation prohibits the packs from being advertised in the shopping catalogue, but it is legal to stack them on the duty-free trolley and wheel them through the cabin.
Qantas has defended the move as a response to customer demand, but lobby groups argue it is an unacceptable return to the "bad old days''.
"At a time when Australian governments are moving to put tobacco displays out of sight to protect young people in particular, Qantas has gone backwards,'' said Anne Jones, chief executive of Action on Smoking and Health.
"Retail tobacco display is a powerful form of advertising, especially in association with a highly respected brand name like Qantas, and research shows it normalises and encourages young people to smoke,'' she added.
Another group, Quit, joined the criticism, with executive director Fiona Sharkie labelling it a ``greedy cash grab''.
"Perhaps the flying kangaroo should be renamed the cancer kangaroo, such is their insistence on the in-flight sale and display of a product that will ultimately kill more than half of long-term users,'' she said.
Qantas Group General Manager (Customer Product and Services) Lesley Grant defended the move, saying the move was motivated by passenger demand. (ANI)
Now, Politics over IPL Cheerleaders.
Now, a computer system that predicts fate of death row inmates.
Now, eco-friendly dresses made of bamboo fibre.
Now, tie the knot in outer space 100 kilometres above the Earth!.
Now, T -shirts and socks with built-in mosquito repellent.



