DutchNews, December 6,
2018
The lawsuit against tobacco firms initiated by anti-smoking campaigners
and health groups will not go ahead now the appeal court has said there are no
grounds for prosecution.
The public prosecution department said in February
that it would not prosecute the case and on Thursday the appeal court too ruled
that the tobacco companies are not doing anything wrong and there is no case to
answer.
‘The complainants in this case are at the wrong address,’ the court
said in its ruling. Instead they should be pressuring the government to change
the laws, the court said.
The case, supported by Dutch hospitals, cancer
charities and healthcare groups, was launched in 2016 by lung cancer patient
Anne Marie van Veen and lawyer Bénédicte Ficq.
They accuse the tobacco firms –
Philip Morris International, British American Tobacco, Japan Tobacco
International and Imperial Tobacco Benelux – of doing ‘deliberate damage to
public health’ and ‘forgery of documents’.
Attempted murder
The case describes
the ‘crimes’ committed by the tobacco firms as ‘attempted murder, alternatively
attempted manslaughter and/or attempted severe and premeditated physical abuse
and/or attempted deliberate and premeditated injuring of health.’
In addition,
they argue the big tobacco firms are guilty of ‘forgery since the tobacco
manufacturers have for years declared emission levels of tar, nicotine and
carbon monoxide on the packages of their tobacco products which were lower than
the actual emission levels.’
A spokesman for Philip Morris told broadcaster NOS
that the ruling recognises the fact that tobacco is a ‘strictly regulated
product’ and that the risks have been known for decades.

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