Court to hear BAT SA tobacco ban challenge on Tuesday

Date:

Cigarettes on sale in the Johannesburg CBD. File image.
Image: Alaister Russell/The Sunday Times

The high court in Cape Town will hear British American Tobacco SA’s (BAT) application to have the ban on the sale of tobacco products set aside next week.

The application is expected to be heard on June 30‚ reports BusinessLIVE.

The ban has been in place since late March when the country entered into a strict lockdown to curb the spread of the coronavirus.

Despite attempts by tobacco companies and manufacturers to lobby for the legal sale of the products‚ the government has refused to budge on lifting the ban.

For now‚ level 3 regulations only allow for local production and sales for the export market.

The ban has led to a loss of tax revenue and has boosted illicit cigarette sales. Sars‚ which is expecting a huge revenue shortfall for 2020/2021‚ had expected to collect R14.5bn on excise taxes for tobacco over the 12 months.

BAT‚ supported by Japan Tobacco International (JTI)‚ as well as groups and organisations representing the tobacco value chain countrywide‚ wants the court to declare the government’s regulations prohibiting the sale of tobacco products unconstitutional and invalid‚ and to have it reviewed and set aside.

In its court papers‚ BAT detailed the devastating effect of the continued ban on its revenue‚ and on the national fiscus‚ which is losing out on billions of rand in excise duties due to the prohibition.

Minister of co-operative governance and traditional affairs Nkosazana Dlamini-Zuma‚ in an affidavit to the court on behalf of herself and President Cyril Ramaphosa‚ defended the ban. The government is adamant that the public-health risks associated with tobacco products during the Covid-19 pandemic outweigh the economic loss‚ which it claims is not as severe as tobacco companies say.

This is the second court application brought in a bid to have the ban lifted. The first application was brought by the Fair Trade Independent Tobacco Association (Fita)‚ a tobacco lobby group representing smaller cigarette manufacturers‚ in the high court in Pretoria. The matter was heard in court two weeks ago and judgment has been reserved.

By: Genevieve Quintal

Source: ARENA Holdings.

2 COMMENTS

  1. The ban is a total failure, I know a lot of smokers & not one of them has stopped smoking, in some cases cigarettes are actually cheaper than they were before the ban, decent cigarettes under R10 a packet. Govt is going to lose revenue big time, many smokers will continue with what they are now smoking.

  2. The ban on tobacco impacting my wellbeing and pocket

    I am not looking after myself the way i should be because of the ban ! I am spending money on getting cigarettes thats now R100 a packet , instead i could be eating a healthy meal, or buying that blanket that I need for winter…

    Lets face it , everyone who smokes is still smoking… Nicotine addiction is real and with the stress over covid19, money, health etc a person like me is not mentally equipped to stop smoking. I have been a smoker for 10+ years .. i am a makeup artist, so the effects of Lockdown has been hard… i am also a recoveringaddict! I had to get help with addiction and am proud to say i am 4 years clean and sober.
    I have tried to stop smoking and the result was anxiety and panic attack’s!!!
    I stay alone in my apparent, i pay my taxes, i try to stay safe… i am paying as much as R100 for a packet of cigarets, driving to un Godly places to get a packet
    Is my well-being not important, how am I protected? Its not like smoking makes me want to do crime!!!!
    Like I said the nicotine addiction is real!!!

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