October 1st 2018, Rendez-vous #16 with Joseph Magero
Joseph Magero writes a blog called Tobacco Harm Reduction and he is active on Twitter.
Thank you, Joseph, for accepting our rendez-vous.
May I first ask you to introduce yourself by giving us a brief personal background about your journey in tobacco control and tobacco harm reduction?
Joseph Magero: I am a tobacco harm-reduction advocate based in Kenya. Having been a smoker for over 15 years, I developed an interest in how people get addicted to smoking and how the industry operates. This is how I got introduced to tobacco control by my good friend, the late Dr.Frank Ashall.
I am passionate about reducing tobacco caused death and disease. I did advocacy work for Africa Tobacco-Free Initiative since 2011, which also included digital advocacy. Our efforts were successful in getting stronger laws in Kenya and Uganda. Our advocacy efforts managed to get shisha banned both in Tanzania and Uganda. Our efforts in tobacco control however did not reduce the number of smokers, which was primarily my main concern. I discovered harm reduction in 2016 while doing my research on ways to curb the epidemic. What we were doing in Tobacco control had very minimal effect, we solely focused on taxes, no help was forthcoming for the smoker. Personally, I quit smoking with the help of vaping last year. Harm reduction is that practical for me since I experienced it.
Q1. You refer to Africa Tobacco-Free Initiative as an entity started by the late Dr Frank Ashall, you and a few other advocates. Can you tell us about what the organization achieved and what happened after Dr Ashall's death? Is ATFI still active today (I could not find any recent presence online)?
Joseph Magero: Dr.Frank Ashall was the founding Chairman of Africa Tobacco-Free Initiative. He together with I and a couple of more people formed the board members, but he was generally in charge of the organization. After he passed away, there was an AGM in which new leaders got elected. As I mentioned before, Africa Tobacco Free Initiative mostly was involved in Advocacy work. Some of the big achievements included getting shisha banned in Tanzania and Uganda. Also supporting advocacy work to get a strong bill passed in Kenya and Uganda too. Although I am not with ATFI anymore, I know that they are reorganizing to become more active, but yes, they do still exist.
Q2. What is your explanation for the attitude of the African tobacco control advocates toward harm reduction? Did you have any chance to discuss your position with anybody you used to work with?
Joseph Magero: Unfortunately, I have never got a chance to discuss my position officially with people I worked with because I was excommunicated without being given a chance to explain my stance. Tobacco control advocates in Africa simply do not want to listen to anything concerning harm-reduction. They do not understand this approach, neither do they want to incorporate it in the fight against smoking. The organizations that fund tobacco control advocacy in the region have strict rules. They frown upon harm reduction. It’s quite unfortunate that they treated me in this manner and went on to inform every other tobacco control advocate in the region not to associate with me.
Q3. In one post you write about the present lack of affordable e-cigarette devices in Africa. You say the product should not cost more than $10/15. Would that be cheap enough when it looks like many smokers in Africa buy by the stick? Is there already a market for African smokers with more income?
Q4. Considering the influence and quasi-exclusive funding of African tobacco control advocates by Bloomberg Philanthropies and the Gates Foundation, can you imagine the growth of an independent tobacco harm reduction movement on the continent?
Joseph Magero: Of course. This is possible. We have seen such movement growing in other regions. This is what we are working towards at the moment.
Q5. What are your present priorities?
Joseph Magero: I do not oppose everything Tobacco control has accomplished in the region, I believe that harm reduction should be incorporated in the fight against smoking. My priorities are to see a reduction in the number of smokers in Africa and a reduction in the number of tobacco-related deaths in Africa.
Q6. Is there anything else you would like to add?
Joseph Magero: Yes. Safer alternatives are here. Let us embrace tobacco harm reduction in our fight against smoking. Other regions have done the same and are reaping benefits, we should not be left behind.
Thank you very much Joseph for having taken the time for this rendez-vous.
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