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U.S. FDA warns websites not to sell banned flavoured cigarettes online

MICHAEL FELBERBAUM, THE ASSOCIATED PRESS
November 06, 2009 6:37 p.m.
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RICHMOND, Va. - The Food and Drug Administration said Friday that it has warned several companies to stop selling banned flavoured cigarettes to U.S. consumers online.

The agency sent letters this week to more than a dozen Web-based companies saying they are violating a new ban and asking the companies to describe in writing what action they have taken to comply.

The FDA banned candy-, fruit-and clove-flavoured cigarettes in September. Federal health authorities and regulators say those products appeal especially to young people and are thought to attract new smokers.

"FDA takes the enforcement of this flavoured cigarette ban seriously," Dr. Lawrence R. Deyton, director of FDA's Center for Tobacco Products, said in a statement. "These actions should send a clear message to those who continue to break the law that FDA will take necessary actions to protect our children from initiating tobacco use."

Citing research, the FDA has said that 17-year-old smokers are three times as likely to use flavoured cigarettes as smokers over the age of 25.

Almost 90 per cent of adult smokers picked up the habit as teenagers, the agency has said, and the ban will help prevent an average of more than 3,600 young people each day from starting smoking.

The ban on manufacturing, importing, marketing and distributing flavoured cigarettes does not include menthol cigarettes or some flavoured tobacco products like cigars. The FDA is studying those products.

The FDA won the authority in June to regulate tobacco including banning certain products, limiting allowable nicotine and blocking labels such "low tar" and "light" meant to convey certain products are less harmful.

Tobacco companies also will be required to cover cigarette cartons with large, graphic warnings.

The law doesn't let the FDA ban nicotine or tobacco, just to regulate what goes into tobacco products, require the ingredients be publicized and limit how tobacco is marketed, especially products geared toward children.

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