News Briefs

Alarm clock announces tobacco-related deaths outside Legislative Assembly

Posted: Tuesday, September 20, 2011 - By Ellen Weathers
An alarm clock installed in front of the Legislative Assembly calls attention to statistics about smoking in Costa Rica.
Anti-Smoking Clock
Alberto Font

Roberto Castro, the president of the National Anti-Tobacco Network, stands next to a giant clock that rings every 2 hours and 40 minutes to represent every time a Costa Rican dies of tobacco related causes. The clock is set up outside the Legislative Assembly.

Every 2 hours and 40 minutes, a Costa Rican dies of tobacco related causes. To demonstrate this statistic, the National Anti-Tobacco Network (Renata) has installed a large alarm clock that rings every 2 hours and 40 minutes in front of the Legislative Assembly in downtown San José.  

The clock will remain outside the assembly for one month as opponents of smoking hope lawmakers will take action. Anti-smoking laws have stalled in Congress since 2008. 

The most recent setback came in August when Luis Antonio Aiza, a National Liberation Party (PLN) legislator and doctor for the Costa Rican Social Secutiy System (Caja), blocked a law that would have prohibited smoking in public places and raised taxes on cigarettes (TT, August 26). In 2010, the Caja invested ₡73 billion ($145 million) for the treatment of cigarette-related illnesses.          

Roberto Castro, a doctor and coordinator for Renata told the daily La Nación, “Tobacco is the only product that kills between 33 and 50 percent of people who use it. We need laws that regulate use so that victims of second-hand smoke will no longer be affected. We have already been waiting for more than 850 days.”

  • Currently 0 out of 5 Stars.
  • 1
  • 2
  • 3
  • 4
  • 5
Rating: 0/5 (0 votes cast)

Thank you for rating!

You have already rated this page, you can only rate it once!

Your rating has been changed, thanks for rating!

Log in or create a user account to rate this page.

| Share

To comment, write a letter to the editor to letters@ticotimes.net. Please make sure to include your full name and location. Letters must be 500 words or fewer. Submissions should be original.

Log in or create a user account to comment.

Comments

May I remind Mr. Castro that there is no money to be made from healthy people. No taxes to be collected from non-smokers. Well. no nicotine taxes anyways.

Weekend

Restaurants

Alquimia 1

An oasis away from city bustle and noise, Alquimia serves an eclectic mix of healthful dishes com...

Arts & Leisure

 Fire station’s miniature museum

AROUND COSTA RICA: The Atenas fire station has a nifty little secret.

Travel

Tortuga Lodge 1

Eco-luxury and wildlife encounters abound at this remote jungle escape.

Fishing Fishing Forum

Fishing Todd

A new satellite technology will help track, count and conserve billfish.