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Posted (edited)

Philip Morris Int. CEO: Cigs not that hard to quit

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By MICHAEL FELBERBAUM

The Associated Press

RICHMOND, Va. — The head of cigarette maker Philip Morris International Inc. told a cancer nurse Wednesday that while cigarettes are harmful and addictive, it is not that hard to quit.

CEO Louis C. Camilleri's statement was in response to comments at its annual shareholder meeting in New York. Executives from the seller of Marlboro and other brands overseas spent most of the gathering sparring with members of anti-tobacco and other corporate accountability groups.

A woman identifying herself as a nurse named Elizabeth from the University of California-San Francisco cited statistics that tobacco use kills more than 400,000 Americans and 5 million people worldwide each year.

She also said a patient told her last week that of all the addictions he's beaten — crack, cocaine, meth — cigarettes have been the most difficult.

In response, the often-unapologetic Camilleri said: "We take our responsibility very seriously, and I don't think we get enough recognition for the efforts we make to ensure that there is effective worldwide regulation of a product that is harmful and that is addictive. Nevertheless, whilst it is addictive, it is not that hard to quit. ... There are more previous smokers in America today than current smokers."

Camilleri himself is a smoker. An April 2009 BusinessWeek article quoted him as saying he had quit only once, for three months when he had a cold. Following Wednesday's meeting, the company reiterated its position that "tobacco products are addictive and harmful."

Matthew Myers, president of the Campaign for Tobacco-Free Kids said the comments represent the "most irresponsible form of corporate double-speak."

"Study after study has documented the powerful addiction to cigarettes is one of the most difficult to overcome of any drug anywhere in the world," Myers said. "It is stunning in the face of overwhelming science for the leader of the world's largest private tobacco company to deny how difficult and addictive cigarettes are."

Morningstar analyst Philip Gorham said addictiveness is why tobacco is such a profitable business.

"It's in the interest of executives to give the impression that they don't want new smokers to take up smoking, that they believe that people who do, can quit, but the statistics tell another story," Gorham said. "I would prefer to see executives focus on what they have done to help smokers quit."

During the meeting, Camilleri also discussed the challenges facing the tobacco industry like tax hikes and regulation, including bans on product displays, ingredients and colorful packaging. He said some of these restrictions impede competition, add costs for retailers, encourage adult smokers to make choices purely on price and foster black markets.

He also said Philip Morris International has successfully managed regulation in the past such as public smoking restrictions, marketing constraints and graphic warning labels.

"In fact, we have largely supported these measures within the framework of comprehensive, effective, and uniform tobacco regulation," Camilleri said. "We do not, however, support regulation that prevents adults from buying and using tobacco products, or that imposes unnecessary impediments to the operation of the legitimate tobacco market."

Last year, Philip Morris International saw its profit grow 14.5 percent as its net revenue excluding excise taxes rose 8.7 percent. The company has raised prices and focused on emerging markets for growth as cigarette demand falls.

Philip Morris International, with offices in New York and Lausanne, Switzerland, was spun off from Richmond, Va.-based Altria in March 2008. Altria still sells Marlboro and other Philip Morris brands in the U.S.

Philip Morris International is the world's largest non-governmental cigarette seller, smaller only than state-controlled China National Tobacco Corp.

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Michael Felberbaum can be reached at http://www.twitter.com/MLFelberbaum

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May 11, 2011 01:21 PM EDT

Copyright 2011, The Associated Press. All rights reserved. This material may not be published, broadcast, rewritten or redistributed.

Edited by Beans
Posted (edited)

He is a real hoot isn't he :thumbsdown:

Beans, I think you are probably going to jail for redistributing, broadcasting and all that other stuff.LOL

Edited by johns
Posted

Oh, well heck. Johns, your just gonna have to turn me in then. I really thought I was doing us all a favor though since Cigs arent hard to quit. I figure we could all start smoking again. :whistle:

Posted (edited)

Cigarettes really aren't hard to quit---I think I quit at least 20-30 times.......Before I found vaping. Its's the staying quit that is the problem...

Edited by kitsune
Posted

I agree with kit...it's the staying quit that's hard. Or was...until vaping came along.

Now they need to come up with something to make losing weight (and not finding it again) just as easy and I'd be one very happy Nana!!!!

Posted

Hey Nana, If I could vape my diet I would be once very, very happy camper. I love junk food and fattening food and sugar food......

Posted

Oh, well heck. Johns, your just gonna have to turn me in then. I really thought I was doing us all a favor though since Cigs arent hard to quit. I figure we could all start smoking again. :whistle:

Nobody better turn Beans in!

Beans is a bright spot and cracks me up, plus, you can't lock up a

ninja vape :ph34r:

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