日批在线视频_内射毛片内射国产夫妻_亚洲三级小视频_在线观看亚洲大片短视频_女性向h片资源在线观看_亚洲最大网

  Home>News Center>World
         
 

Irish pub smokers take last pre-ban puffs
(Agencies)
Updated: 2004-03-29 14:17

Smokers in local pubs enjoyed their final, bittersweet puffs Sunday as Ireland prepared to impose the world's most comprehensive ban on tobacco use in the workplace.

The ban, effective at the stroke of midnight, will bring potentially hefty fines on any business that permits smoking indoors — a crackdown causing equal measures of pain and joy, particularly inside the country's smoky public houses.

Two men smoke at The Oval Bar in Dublin, Ireland March 28, 2004. Ireland joined the ranks of New York and California on March 29, 2004 when its law banning smoking in any enclosed workspace- including pubs- commenced.  [AP]
"I'm going out in a cloud of smoke!" said bricklayer Seamus McCann, who launched a Sunday pub crawl as soon as Dublin's bars opened at noon and kept two cigarettes going simultaneously as the clock ticked down to midnight.

Prime Minister Bertie Ahern, a nonsmoker and regular pubgoer himself, said he envisioned an Ireland where "future generations, thankfully, will never know what it was like to work in an enclosed, smoke-filled environment."

Health Minister Micheal Martin, who spearheaded the initiative after commissioning reports into the potentially deadly affects of secondhand smoke, said he expected it would "take six weeks to two months for the ban to settle down." His target, he said, was for more than 90 percent compliance within the year.

Several opinion polls in the past year have indicated most Irish adults — about 30 percent of whom smoke — support the government crusade against tobacco.

"It will be marvelous to have a night out, then not wake up in the morning with your hair and clothes stinking of smoke," said homemaker Eileen Kennedy, who generally smokes a few cigarettes a week — when she goes out for a drink with her husband.

Martin's anti-smoking campaign — which involves graphic billboards and TV ads showing the damage cigarettes can do to the lungs, heart and brain — has inspired thousands to try to break the habit, seeking advice on nicotine-replacement therapy through a government-run help-line.

"I think, at the end of the day, a person can't argue with the logic of it because we all know cigarettes are bad for us," said cabbie Shay Kearney, a smoker who's thinking of quitting now. "And if it actually encourages people to give up, in the long term, maybe it's a good thing — obviously it's a good thing."

Owners of pubs and hotels warn the ban will alienate many European tourists and force away loyal customers. One pro-smoking pressure group predicts up to 65,000 job losses as pubs and hotels in rural areas are forced to close. But the two major publicans' associations backed off threats to block the ban in court.

Oliver Hughes, who owns a pub in Dublin's Temple Bar tourist quarter, said he expected European visitors "may find it hard to understand that they can't have a cigarette in Dublin, but if they go to Amsterdam they can have a joint."

But the government's Office of Tobacco Control cites its own polls indicating twice as many people think they will go to the pub more often after the ban than will stay away because of it.

Commentators appear evenly split between those who admire Ireland for becoming the first nation on earth to impose such a ban and those who think the government is trampling on easygoing traditions and importing a brand of Puritanism better left in New York City or California.

"This will bring the greatest cultural change to Ireland since the Famine," said Nell McCafferty, a writer and devoted smoker who thinks the government is choking off personal freedoms. "And at least the British were sporting during the Famine — if you could find a potato, they let you eat it."

Some of Ireland's 10,000 pubs plan to create chic new smoking areas outdoors, using canopies and outdoor gas fires. Others, particularly in poorly policed rural areas, say they will try to let their smoking regulars keep going and hope that the handful of Dublin-based inspectors enforcing the ban will pass them by.

But most pubs say they simply will order smokers outside onto the sidewalk if they want to light up.

 
  Today's Top News     Top World News
 

Nation indignant over US arms sale to Taiwan

 

   
 

Taiwan court to hear recount lawsuit

 

   
 

NPC to interpret annexes of HK Basic Law

 

   
 

China to US: Stop spying in border areas

 

   
 

2008 Games to bring US$16b business

 

   
 

Flight insurance dispute soars

 

   
  US vows to avenge Iraq killings
   
  Sharon threatens Arafat in interview
   
  Voting begins in Sri Lanka
   
  Study says S. India has highest young suicide rate
   
  Google introduces free e-mail service
   
  Condom label changes spark debate in US
   
 
  Go to Another Section  
 
 
  Story Tools  
   
  Related Stories  
   
Moscow reportedly considers kissing ban
  News Talk  
  April Fool's!  
Advertisement
         
主站蜘蛛池模板: 亚洲激情一区二区三区 | 欧美一级片在线视频 | 99热91| 天堂视频网 | 超碰97观看 | 日本伊人网 | 午夜视频入口 | 国产精品久久国产精品 | av在线网站观看 | 黄视频在线免费看 | 中文在线字幕av | 午夜视频一区二区 | 久操伊人网 | 国产欧美日韩一区二区三区 | 五月婷婷激情综合网 | 精品乱子伦 | 91亚洲国产成人精品一区二区三 | 国产精品亚洲天堂 | 成人网址在线观看 | 成人高清在线 | 在线观看视频中文字幕 | 老汉色av | 成人免费看片39 | 国产视频网 | 欧美日韩高清在线 | 午夜精品福利一区二区 | 在线免费观看一级片 | 少妇高潮一区二区三区99 | 91在线公开视频 | 2019av| 国产午夜亚洲精品午夜鲁丝片 | 日韩在线二区 | 91成人在线免费视频 | 婷婷色图| 一区二区三区有限公司 | 91动态图 | 免费观看av的网站 | 久久久999国产精品 日韩av手机在线免费观看 | 夜夜夜夜爽 | 久久在线免费视频 | 偷拍欧美亚洲 |