Popular on Rezul
- ClearLead Digital Named an "Emerging Leader" in Independent 2026 Property Management Website & SEO Report
- New Luxury Single Family Homes From $976,990 in Manalapan
- The Importance of Community Connections
- NRE Health Institute Launches International Study Examining Motivations Behind Non-Sexual Nudity
- 15 Best Areas to Invest in Property UK in 2026 Revealed by New Investor Research
- Mike Williams Golf Center Now Open at Georgia's Lanier Islands Resort
- CCHR Calls Out Psychiatry's Pattern of Resistance to Antidepressant Deprescribing
- Turnkey Michigan City Event Venue Listed for $2.5M in Uptown Arts District
- Appliance EMT Launches June "Summer Rescue" Promotion
- West Virginia Leaders Announce Support for Election Integrity Network's Model Election Laws Handbook
Similar on Rezul
- Kasinohai Audit: Most Slots Could Be Affected by Finland's Draft Gambling Rules
- Why More Phoenix Families Are Turning to Private Autopsy Services for Answers
- Vierra Communities Adds Operations of Two Skilled Nursing Facilities in the DC Metro Area
- Dentists launch independent platform to help practices choose the right technology
- Contracting Resources Group Recognized by The Daily Record as a 2026 In the Lead: Best Women-Owned Businesses Honoree
- IGH Naturals Announces Peer-Reviewed HuMOLYTE® Study Published in Frontiers in Nutrition
- Triple-Digit Growth, Stock Market Upgrade plus a Rapidly Expanding Specialty Healthcare Platform: Cardiff Lexington Corporation (Stock Symbol: CDIX)
- AI-Powered Neuropsychiatry, FDA Regulatory Momentum, Commercial Ketamine Launch Position NRx Pharmaceuticals for Potential Breakout Growth in 2026
- Sexually Abused in a Psychiatric Hospital or Psychiatrist's or Psychologist's Office? CCHR Urges Survivors to Reach Out to It
- Ricci's Painting & Contracting Expands Home Transformation Services
CAPHRA: Australia and Thailand show nicotine prohibition fuels illicit markets
Rezul News/10737859
Nicotine prohibition does not eliminate demand, the Coalition of Asia Pacific Tobacco Harm Reduction Advocates (CAPHRA) says. It shifts supply from regulated channels to illicit markets.
WELLINGTON, New Zealand - Rezul -- Australia and Thailand are showing that nicotine prohibition does not eliminate demand, the Coalition of Asia Pacific Tobacco Harm Reduction Advocates (CAPHRA) says. It shifts supply from regulated channels to illicit markets.
In Australia, authorities have seized more than 20 million illegal vapes since January 2024.
Recent reporting also suggests the country's illicit nicotine market has grown dramatically, with black-market supply linked to organised crime and enforcement crackdowns struggling to contain it.
"Australia's vaping prohibition has become a textbook example of what happens when ideology overrides evidence," said Alan Gorley, from ALIVE Advocacy Australia. "It has not eliminated demand. It has expanded the illicit market, enriched criminal networks, and left consumers with fewer protections than before."
Nancy Loucas, Executive Coordinator of CAPHRA, said the policy failure should be a warning to the wider Asia Pacific region.
More on Rezul News
"Prohibition does not end nicotine use," Loucas said. "It hands the market to criminal operators, weakens consumer protections, and leaves adults with fewer legal options to move away from smoking."
CAPHRA said Thailand's 11-year vape ban shows the same pattern. CAPHRA said Thailand's long-running vape ban has pushed consumers into black-market channels.
Thai advocate Asa Saligupta says prohibition expanded underground sales and left smokers with fewer lower-risk alternatives.
"Thailand's ban did not make vaping disappear," said Asa Saligupta of ENDs Cigarette Smoke Thailand. "It made products unregulated, impossible to control the substance contained, easier for illegal sellers to exploit, and harder for people who smoke to switch."
Gorley said the damage extends beyond illicit trade itself.
"The greatest harm may be the loss of trust when authorities refuse to acknowledge the consequences of their own policies," he said. "Australians can see the gap between what they are told is happening and what is plainly happening around them."
CAPHRA supports strict age limits, product standards, and enforcement against illegal sellers, but says those goals require regulated legal access, accurate risk communication, and proportionate policy — not prohibition.
https://www.caphraorg.net
In Australia, authorities have seized more than 20 million illegal vapes since January 2024.
Recent reporting also suggests the country's illicit nicotine market has grown dramatically, with black-market supply linked to organised crime and enforcement crackdowns struggling to contain it.
"Australia's vaping prohibition has become a textbook example of what happens when ideology overrides evidence," said Alan Gorley, from ALIVE Advocacy Australia. "It has not eliminated demand. It has expanded the illicit market, enriched criminal networks, and left consumers with fewer protections than before."
Nancy Loucas, Executive Coordinator of CAPHRA, said the policy failure should be a warning to the wider Asia Pacific region.
More on Rezul News
- Why More Phoenix Families Are Turning to Private Autopsy Services for Answers
- Make America French Again Launches National Campaign
- RAS AP Consulting Expands AP Governance & Automation Practice and Named Finalist for Heidelberg Materials SAP Vendor & Customer Data Project
- Lee & Associates announces sale of 24,825 SF industrial property at 2216 Pech Road in Houston
- 100+ Episodes In, Liftoff with Keith Newman Tells Founders to Stop Publishing More
"Prohibition does not end nicotine use," Loucas said. "It hands the market to criminal operators, weakens consumer protections, and leaves adults with fewer legal options to move away from smoking."
CAPHRA said Thailand's 11-year vape ban shows the same pattern. CAPHRA said Thailand's long-running vape ban has pushed consumers into black-market channels.
Thai advocate Asa Saligupta says prohibition expanded underground sales and left smokers with fewer lower-risk alternatives.
"Thailand's ban did not make vaping disappear," said Asa Saligupta of ENDs Cigarette Smoke Thailand. "It made products unregulated, impossible to control the substance contained, easier for illegal sellers to exploit, and harder for people who smoke to switch."
Gorley said the damage extends beyond illicit trade itself.
"The greatest harm may be the loss of trust when authorities refuse to acknowledge the consequences of their own policies," he said. "Australians can see the gap between what they are told is happening and what is plainly happening around them."
CAPHRA supports strict age limits, product standards, and enforcement against illegal sellers, but says those goals require regulated legal access, accurate risk communication, and proportionate policy — not prohibition.
https://www.caphraorg.net
Source: CAPHRA
0 Comments
Latest on Rezul News
- Dentists launch independent platform to help practices choose the right technology
- Global Real Estate Pro and Grupo Verde Azul
- Contracting Resources Group Recognized by The Daily Record as a 2026 In the Lead: Best Women-Owned Businesses Honoree
- Woodforest Acceptance Solutions and AlpacaBOSS Launch Partnership
- Titan Pressure Washing Shows The Power Of Complete Exterior Cleaning On A Roof And Concrete Project
- New "Lakeside Picnic Ride" Package in Japan's Lake Chuzenji region of Nikko: July 1- November 30, 2026
- Former MP Shri GV Harsha Kumar Meets AICC President Mallikarjun Kharge
- Two Attorneys at The Stanley Law Group Named to 2026 South Carolina Super Lawyers List
- Equity Real Estate Acquires NRE, Expanding Opportunities for Agents Across Northern Utah
- IGH Naturals Announces Peer-Reviewed HuMOLYTE® Study Published in Frontiers in Nutrition
- Allstream Energy Partners Expands AI-Optimized Website Development Division to Meet Growing Demand in GEO / AEO Services
- America's Workforce Solution Named an OpenAI SMB Channel Partner, Bringing Enterprise-Grade AI to Main Street
- Data Tiles Introduces the Decision-Driven Enterprise to North America
- East Bay Realtor Judy Sin on What Relocation Buyers Seek in Lamorinda
- Disruptor Creations Pioneers New MicroAdventure Series with TravelSpike
- The "For Sale" Sign Has Been There a While. Why Is That House Still Sitting on the Market?
- Treasure Island Vacation Rental Condo Market Reports 77.7% Increase in Median Sale Price as Tourism Reaches Record Levels
- eCopier Solutions Surpasses 3,000 Five-Star Google Reviews and Maintains Perfect Five-Star Rating
- Creative Investment Research Welcomes Supreme Court Decision Protecting Federal Reserve Independence While Calling for Continued Accountability
- Thomas Moore: Two Decades Tackling Nevada's Property Abandonment Crisis
