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In September 2017, Philip Morris International announced a pledge of USD 80 million dollars a year for 12 years beginning in 2018 for the creation of its latest “independent” research effort, the [https://web.archive.org/save/https://www.smokefreeworld.org/ Foundation for a Smoke-Free World]. <ref>[https://web.archive.org/save/http://fortune.com/2017/09/13/philip-morris-billion-smoke-free-foundation/Philip Morris Pledges Almost $1 Billion to Anti-Smoking Fight], ''Fortune'', September 2017, Accessed 15 September 2018</ref> According to the Foundation's website, it has four focus areas and works to reduce health impacts and deaths from smoking, with the ultimate goal of eliminating smoking worldwide.<ref> Foundation for a Smoke-Free World, [https://web.archive.org/save/https://www.smokefreeworld.org/our-areas-focusOur areas of focus], Accessed 8 September 2018</ref> In October 2018, a statement by a number of anti-tobacco organisations and universities called for the [https://web.archive.org/save/https://www.conradchallenge.org/conrad-foundation/ Conrad Foundation] to severe its ties with the Philip Morris International-funded Foundation for a Smoke-Free World on an initiative working with high school students in the United States. <ref> Cision, [https://www.prnewswire.com/news-releases/conrad-foundation-should-sever-ties-with-philip-morris-funded-foundation-for-a-smoke-free-world-300736373.html Conrad Foundation Should Sever Ties with Philip Morris-Funded Foundation for a Smoke-Free World], October 2018, Accessed 12 October 2018</ref> The Foundation published a report that encourages tobacco company ‘rebranding’ and offers examples of how other companies, including IBM, GE or Ford, redefined and in some cases (like Ford) rebranded themselves to secure future customers. <ref name="PMI_FSFW"> Foundation For A Smoke-Free World, [https://web.archive.org/save/https://www.smokefreeworld.org/sites/default/files/fsfw_business_transformation_white_paper.pdf?utm_source=twitter&utm_medium=social&utm_content=nov282018_kol&utm_campaign=always_on_social BUSINESS TRANSFORMATION An Analysis of Case Studies Relevant to Achieving a Smoke-Free World], November 2018, Accessed 17 November 2018 </ref> The report included the following call to action:
 
In September 2017, Philip Morris International announced a pledge of USD 80 million dollars a year for 12 years beginning in 2018 for the creation of its latest “independent” research effort, the [https://web.archive.org/save/https://www.smokefreeworld.org/ Foundation for a Smoke-Free World]. <ref>[https://web.archive.org/save/http://fortune.com/2017/09/13/philip-morris-billion-smoke-free-foundation/Philip Morris Pledges Almost $1 Billion to Anti-Smoking Fight], ''Fortune'', September 2017, Accessed 15 September 2018</ref> According to the Foundation's website, it has four focus areas and works to reduce health impacts and deaths from smoking, with the ultimate goal of eliminating smoking worldwide.<ref> Foundation for a Smoke-Free World, [https://web.archive.org/save/https://www.smokefreeworld.org/our-areas-focusOur areas of focus], Accessed 8 September 2018</ref> In October 2018, a statement by a number of anti-tobacco organisations and universities called for the [https://web.archive.org/save/https://www.conradchallenge.org/conrad-foundation/ Conrad Foundation] to severe its ties with the Philip Morris International-funded Foundation for a Smoke-Free World on an initiative working with high school students in the United States. <ref> Cision, [https://www.prnewswire.com/news-releases/conrad-foundation-should-sever-ties-with-philip-morris-funded-foundation-for-a-smoke-free-world-300736373.html Conrad Foundation Should Sever Ties with Philip Morris-Funded Foundation for a Smoke-Free World], October 2018, Accessed 12 October 2018</ref> The Foundation published a report that encourages tobacco company ‘rebranding’ and offers examples of how other companies, including IBM, GE or Ford, redefined and in some cases (like Ford) rebranded themselves to secure future customers. <ref name="PMI_FSFW"> Foundation For A Smoke-Free World, [https://web.archive.org/save/https://www.smokefreeworld.org/sites/default/files/fsfw_business_transformation_white_paper.pdf?utm_source=twitter&utm_medium=social&utm_content=nov282018_kol&utm_campaign=always_on_social BUSINESS TRANSFORMATION An Analysis of Case Studies Relevant to Achieving a Smoke-Free World], November 2018, Accessed 17 November 2018 </ref> The report included the following call to action:
 
   "We invite stakeholders in the business and financial communities, researchers, NGOs, regulators, smokers, and tobacco farmers to join the discussion of the transformational possibilities available to the tobacco industry. We believe the case studies presented in this report will help frame and promote the conversation." {{r|PMI_FSFW}} As of May 2019, the Foundation is still funded solely by Philip Morris International but is “seeking and expects to receive funding from other sources”. <ref name="PMI_FSFW2">  The Lancet, [https://web.archive.org/save/https://www.thelancet.com/journals/lancet/article/PIIS0140-6736(19)31347-9/fulltext The Philip Morris-funded Foundation for a Smoke-Free World: tax return sheds light on funding activities], 6 June 2019, Accessed 21 July 2019 </ref>
 
   "We invite stakeholders in the business and financial communities, researchers, NGOs, regulators, smokers, and tobacco farmers to join the discussion of the transformational possibilities available to the tobacco industry. We believe the case studies presented in this report will help frame and promote the conversation." {{r|PMI_FSFW}} As of May 2019, the Foundation is still funded solely by Philip Morris International but is “seeking and expects to receive funding from other sources”. <ref name="PMI_FSFW2">  The Lancet, [https://web.archive.org/save/https://www.thelancet.com/journals/lancet/article/PIIS0140-6736(19)31347-9/fulltext The Philip Morris-funded Foundation for a Smoke-Free World: tax return sheds light on funding activities], 6 June 2019, Accessed 21 July 2019 </ref>
 
Foundation for Smoke-Free World funded the following publications and reports in 2020: <ref> Foundatoin for Smoke-Free World, [https://web.archive.org/save/https://www.smokefreeworld.org/wp-content/uploads/2021/05/2020-Reports_Updated.pdf 2020 Publications and Reports], Accessed 22 July 2021</ref>
 
{| class="wikitable sortable"
 
! style="font-weight:bold; width:20%" |Name
 
! style="font-weight:bold; width:20%" |Author/ Publisher
 
! style="font-weight:bold; width:40%" |Overview
 
! style="font-weight:bold; width:40%" |Year
 
|-
 
|Tiakina Wāhine Flyer Online
 
|Author: Glover M.
 
Centre of Research Excellence: Indigenous Sovereignty & Smoking: January 13, 2020
 
|NA
 
|2020
 
|-
 
|Potential effects of using non-combustible tobacco and nicotine products during pregnancy: a systematic review.
 
|Authors: Glover M, Phillips CV.
 
Harm Reduction Journal : March 02, 2020
 
|NA
 
|2020
 
|-
 
|How New Zealand vapers might respond to e-liquid flavor ban
 
|Author: Glover M.
 
Centre of Research Excellence: Indigenous Sovereignty & Smoking: March 13, 2020
 
|NA
 
|2020
 
|-
 
|The Rise of the Wild-Wild-West Style Robberies
 
|Author: Glover M.
 
Centre of Research Excellence: Indigenous Sovereignty & Smoking: March 13, 2020
 
|NA
 
|2020
 
|-
 
|Tiaki Kaumatua A4 Poster
 
|Author: Glover M.
 
Centre of Research Excellence: Indigenous Sovereignty & Smoking: March 24, 2020
 
|NA
 
|2020
 
|-
 
|Protect Our Elders Fijiian A4 Poster
 
|Author: Glover M.
 
Centre of Research Excellence: Indigenous Sovereignty & Smoking: March 24, 2020
 
|NA
 
|2020
 
|-
 
|A Report on Smoking Detection and Quitting Technologies
 
|Authors: Ortis A, Caponnetto P, Polosa R, Urso S, Battiato, S.
 
Center of Excellence for the Acceleration of Harm Reduction (CoEHAR): April, 10, 2020
 
|NA
 
|2020
 
|-
 
|Protect our Elders in Urdu A4 Poster
 
|Author: Glover M.
 
Centre of Research Excellence: Indigenous Sovereignty & Smoking: April 18, 2020
 
|NA
 
|2020
 
|-
 
|The scope of tobacco cessation randomized controlled trials in low- to middle-income countries: protocol for a scoping review.
 
|Authors: Kumar N, Ainooson J, Billings A, et al.
 
Systematic Reviews: April 21, 2020
 
|NA
 
|2020
 
|-
 
|Restricting Flavors in ENDS Could Have Repercussions Beyond Youth’s Use
 
|Authors: Erkkila B, Kovacevic P, Yach D.
 
American Public Health Association: May 6, 2020
 
|NA
 
|2020
 
|-
 
|A Holistic Approach to Pandemic Recovery
 
|Author: Yach D.
 
The Times of India: May 12, 2020
 
|NA
 
|2020
 
|-
 
|Accelerating an end to smoking: a call to action on the eve of the FCTC’s COP9.
 
|Author: Yach D.
 
Drugs and Alcohol Today: May 23, 2020
 
|NA
 
|2020
 
|-
 
|An overview of tobacco control interventions in the Global South.
 
|Authors: Kumar N, Janmohamed K, Jiang J, et al.
 
Drugs and Alcohol Today: May 25, 2020
 
|NA
 
|2020
 
|-
 
|Tobacco Use Patterns in five countries during the COVID-19 Lockdown
 
|Author: Yach D.
 
Society for Research on Nicotine and Tobacco: May 28, 2020
 
|NA
 
|2020
 
|-
 
|A Critical Interpretive Synthesis to Develop Quality Assessment Tools for E-Cigarette Systematic Reviews: Scope and Protocol
 
|Authors: O’Leary R, Constanzo F.
 
Center of Excellence for the Acceleration of Harm Reduction (CoEHAR): May 29, 2020
 
|NA
 
|2020
 
|-
 
|Quit During COVID019 – staying smokefree in mental health in-patient settings
 
|Authors: Patwardhan P, Driscoll R.
 
Centre of Health Research and Education, UK: June 04, 2020
 
|NA
 
|2020
 
|-
 
|The First complete Zoroastrian-Parsi Mitochondria Reference Genome: Implications of mitochondrial signatures in an endogamous, non-smoking population
 
|Authors: Patell VM, Pasha N, Krishnasamy K, et al.
 
Cold Spring Harbor Laboratory: June 08, 2020
 
|NA
 
|2020
 
|-
 
|COVID-19 FSFW’s smoking poll highlights doctors’ crucial role
 
|Author: Yach D.
 
Sama Insider: July 7, 2020
 
|NA
 
|2020
 
|-
 
|Tobacco smoking in three ‘left behind’ subgroups: indigenous, the rainbow community and people with mental health conditions.
 
|Authors: Glover M, Patwardhan P, Selket K.
 
Drugs and Alcohol Today: July 9, 2020
 
|NA
 
|2002
 
|-
 
|Tobacco harm reduction in the 21st century
 
|Authors: O’Leary R, Polosa R.
 
Drugs and Alcohol Today: July 14, 2020
 
|NA
 
|2020
 
|-
 
|Goodbye Nicky hello Goldie – exploring the opportunities for transitioning tobacco farmers into cannabis production in Malawi
 
|Authors: Sowoya L, Akamwaza C, Mathews Matola A, Klein A.
 
Drugs and Alcohol Today: July 15, 2020
 
|NA
 
|2020
 
|-
 
|Perceptions of nicotine in current and former users of tobacco and tobacco harm reduction products from seven countries.
 
|Authors: Rajkumar S, Adibah N, Paskow MJ, et al.
 
Drugs and Alcohol Today: July 17, 2020
 
|NA
 
|2020
 
|-
 
|Overcoming barriers to disseminate effective smoking cessation treatments globally.
 
|Authors: Patwardhan S, Rose JE.
 
Drugs and Alcohol Today: July 18, 2020
 
|NA
 
|2020
 
|-
 
|Government intervention in the market for electronic nicotine delivery systems (ENDS)
 
|Authors: Yurekli AA, Kovacevic P, Sunley E, et al.
 
Drugs and Alcohol Today: July 20, 2020
 
|NA
 
|2020
 
|-
 
|Gender, women, and the future of tobacco control.
 
|Author: Solomon A.
 
Drugs and Alcohol Today: August 03, 2020
 
|NA
 
|2020
 
|-
 
|People trust the state less than doctors, which is where smoking comes in
 
|Author: Yach, D.
 
Business Day: August 12, 2020
 
|NA
 
|2020
 
|-
 
|Better to let them smoke and die? Bloomberg funded major international NGO’s logic for LMICs is baffling and worrying
 
|Author: Yach D.
 
CSD Consulting: August 12, 2020
 
|NA
 
|2020
 
|-
 
|Expert urges innovations in tobacco control
 
|Author: Satapathy, S.
 
Asia Times: August 30, 2020
 
|NA
 
|2020
 
|-
 
|Nicotine products relative risk assessment: a systematic review and meta-analysis
 
|Authors: Murkett R, Rugh M, Ding B.
 
F1000
 
|NA
 
|2020
 
|-
 
|International Randomized Controlled Trial Evaluating Changes in Oral Health in Smokers after Switching to Combustion-Free Nicotine Delivery Systems: SMILE Study protocol
 
|Authors: Conte G, Antonio Pacino S, Urso S, Polosa R, et al.
 
Center of Excellence for the Acceleration of Harm Reduction (CoEHAR): December 14, 2020
 
|NA
 
|2020
 
|-
 
|A Review on Food Recognition Technology for Health Applications
 
|Authors: Allegra D, Battiato S, Ortis A, Urso S, & Polosa, R.
 
Center of Excellence for the Acceleration of Harm Reduction (CoEHAR): December 30, 2020
 
|NA
 
|2020
 
|-
 
|Trends in tobacco smoking and smoking cessation in Russia with a focus on Indigenous populations: A narrative review
 
|Authors: Merkin A, Nikolaev A, Nikoforov I, Komarrov A, Glover M.
 
Elsevier: December 31, 2020
 
|NA
 
|2020
 
|-
 
|Tobacco Harm Reduction and the Right to Health
 
|Knowledge.Action.Change
 
|A Global State of Tobacco Harm Reduction introductory briefing paper, Tobacco harm reduction and the right to health offers an overview of key issues in tobacco harm reduction, its public health potential and its relationship with human rights.
 
|2020
 
|-
 
|Rapid Assessment of Smoking and Vaping in Pakistan during COVID-19 Lockdown
 
|Alternative Research Initiative
 
|This rapid perception study assessed availability and accessibility of vaping and smoking during the lockdown and the impact of Covid-19 on them. PANTHR collected primary qualitative data from 120 respondents in 11 districts – Islamabad, Rawalpindi, Lahore, Faisalabad, Sialkot, Multan, Peshawar, Abbottabad, Quetta, Karachi and Hyderabad - by conducting interviews telephonically. With the consent of the respondents, interviews have been recorded. All study respondents, smokers and vapers, are male, and mostly between 18-35 years old. There are significantly more smokers than vapers in the age bracket 35 years and above.
 
|Published March 2020
 
|-
 
|COVID-19 State of Smoking Poll
 
|Foundation for a Smoke-Free World
 
|The Foundation for a Smoke-Free World commissioned a poll in five countries that explores the relationship between COVID-19 social distancing and health among 6,801 tobacco and nicotine users. More than two thirds of the respondents rely on tobacco and nicotine as their main tool to manage stress and anxiety. Nearly 40% of smokers increased use of these products in recent weeks, which could equate to elevated use by more than 50 million smokers in the five countries polled.
 
|2020
 
|-
 
|Watching Briefs: Hungary
 
|Foundation for a Smoke-Free World
 
|The Watching Brief series chronicles the most up-to-date data on smoking across the world. In the first of this series, Foundation economist Ayda Yurekli examines the current state of the Hungarian tobacco industry. From analyses of excise taxes to an investigation of illicit trade, this two-part Brief offers an illuminating look into the past, present, and future of smoking in Hungary.
 
|2020
 
|-
 
|Farm Level Analysis of the Impact of COVID19 on Agrifood Systems in Malawi
 
|MwAPATA Institute
 
|Nearly 300 farmers were interviewed to assess the impact of COVID-19 and the Government efforts to combat the disease on agricultural production and marketing during the 2019-2020 agricultural season. Farmers were also asked how they expect the effects will last into the 2020-2021 season.
 
|2020
 
|-
 
|Agricultural Transformation in Malawi: A Call to Action
 
|MwAPATA Institute
 
|This paper seeks to 1) highlight the urgent need for change in Malawi’s economic management and performance, 2) highlight policy interventions that Malawi could adopt to achieve significant economic development, and 3) address the question of how the necessary transformation may be brought about.
 
|2020
 
|-
 
|India Country Report
 
|Foundation for a Smoke-Free World
 
|The Foundation for a Smoke-Free World is committed to filling key knowledge gaps in our collective understanding of tobacco production and use, especially in the low- and middle-income countries where it is increasingly grown and consumed. In that vein, this report provides a glimpse of the tobacco landscape in India. As one of the world’s largest producers and consumers of tobacco, understanding this landscape and the opportunities to transform – both literally and figuratively – have never been more important. This report only scratches the surface of the forces shaping that landscape, but we hope that, in doing so, it encourages others to make even greater explorations of it.
 
|2020
 
|-
 
|The Future of Smallholder Farming in Malawi
 
|MwAPATA Institute
 
|The study characterizes smallholder farming in Malawi, projects the consequences of a ‘business as usual’ strategy and identifies promising government strategies to support smallholder livelihoods and contribute to wealth creation.
 
|2020
 
|-
 
|THR: Regulatory Economic, and Taxation Perspectives (Proceedings of the 2020 Dubrovnik Consultation)
 
|Foundation for a Smoke-Free World
 
|This is a summary of expert contributions to the 2020 Dubrovnik Consultation, a summit meeting on regulatory issues, taxation and other perspectives in tobacco harm reduction. This summit was originally planned as a live meeting in Dubrovnik, Croatia in mid-2020, but was postponed due to the global COVID-19 pandemic. The expert contributions to the virtual meetings are summarized in this document. The Dubrovnik Consultation is a unique opportunity to identify areas of intervention in tobacco harm reduction regulation and to enable the Foundation of the Smoke-Free World to prioritize future areas of research.
 
|2020
 
|-
 
|Unlocking Implementation Challenges: Lessons from the Agricultural Sector
 
|MwAPATA Institute
 
|This study investigates the causes of challenges in programs, policies and strategies implementation in agricultural sector and draw lessons that can inform the ministries responsible for agriculture and rural development address these challenges.
 
|2020
 
|-
 
|Women as Levers of Change
 
|Foreign Policy Analytics
 
|The report, Women as Levers of Change, examines the current state of gender inequality in historically male dominated industries, ways in which women are driving progress toward industry transformation and sustainable development, factors preventing gender diversity, and best practices for unleashing the transformative power of women. The report found that within 14 legacy industries, women on average represent just over 20% of the employees hired by publicly listed companies, 18% of executive management, and only 13% of board seats. These deficiencies exist even though companies with the highest percentages of women in management were 47% more profitable.
 
|2020
 
|-
 
|Contradictions and Conflicts
 
|Just Managing Consulting
 
|Research by leading international business and corporate governance scholar Daniel Malan identifies inherent conflicts of interest with many of the countries leading the development of global tobacco control policy. The “Contradictions and Conflicts” report specifically identifies contradictions between governments’ fiduciary responsibility to maximize state monopoly profitability and their health responsibility to minimize public health risks, as well as generate potential solutions.
 
Tobacco products kill 8 million people every year. Between 2000 and 2019, overall global tobacco use declined by less than a quarter of a percentage point per year, despite global attempts to address the pandemic, spearheaded by the World Health Organization’s Framework Convention on Tobacco Control (FCTC), in force since 2005. There are currently 182 parties to the FCTC, which has as its main objective “to protect present and future generations from the devastating health, social, environmental and economic consequences of tobacco consumption and exposure”.
 
|2020
 
|-
 
|An Early Assessment of the Impact of COVID19 in Malawi
 
|MwAPATA Institute
 
|The COVID-19 crisis has impacted every facet of Malawi's agricultural value chains. We present and evaluate new data from across the spectrum to begin to allow policy makers to make decisions with information on how the country has been affected and discuss the importance of continued monitoring.
 
|2020
 
|-
 
|Phasing Out Combustible Cigarettes
 
|Author: Derek Yach
 
|This paper outlines rational, researched-based strategies for phasing out combustible cigarettes, including a “nudge” approach and logical regulatory actions. Central to this plan are scientifically informed policies regarding THRPs. Unfortunately, the media and public officials have distributed so much misinformation about these products that an increasing numbers of smokers think their health risks are equal to that of combustible cigarettes. This view is not only inaccurate but dangerous, and public officials have an ethical and professional obligation to correct these misperceptions.
 
|2020
 
|-
 
|Smoky Horizons: Tobacco And Empire In Asia, 1850 – 2000
 
|Asia Public History Foundation
 
|Few have attempted to study the introduction and spread of tobacco cultivation in Asia using an analytical frame, which integrates the imperial economy, local social structures, and the commodity history of tobacco. This is a report on preliminary archival and ethnographic work on the economic and social relationship between tobacco cultivation and imperial expansion in Asia, focusing primarily on British India (today’s nation-states of India, Pakistan, and Bangladesh), China, and Japan.
 
|2020
 
|-
 
|Manufacturing and Industrialization in Malawi: Trends, Opportunities, and Strategies
 
|MwAPATA Institute
 
|We review experiences from other fast-growing economies in sub-Saharan Africa and newly industrialized economies in East Asia to draw out lessons for Malawi’s industrialization strategy to promote employment, wealth creation, and reduced economic vulnerabilities associated with primary agricultural products.
 
|2020
 
|-
 
|2020 Tobacco Transformation Index (TM) Ranking Report
 
|Foundation for a Smoke Free World
 
|The 2020 Tobacco Transformation Index TM represents the first comprehensive effort to evaluate tobacco companies’ commitments and actions as they relate to tobacco harm reduction.
 
The 2020 index assesses the activities and performance of the world’s 15 most globally and regionally influential tobacco companies as they pertain to tobacco harm reduction. This includes analyzing and comparing companies’ respective product offerings, sales performance, and capital investments for both high-risk tobacco products and reduced-risk alternatives. The 2020 index also compares companies’ activities and performance across 36 countries, which are divided into groups of low-medium income (LMIC) and high-medium income (HMIC).
 
By monitoring and critically evaluating tobacco companies’ behavior, including actions that either support or impede tobacco harm reduction, the Index provides objective, transparent information to all stakeholders and incentivizes companies to act more quickly and responsibly than they otherwise would.
 
|2020
 
|-
 
|Burning Issues
 
|Knowledge. Action. Change.
 
|This latest report in The Global State of Tobacco Harm Reduction series from UK-based public health agency Knowledge·Action·Change (KAC) examines the role of tobacco harm reduction. The authors show there is an urgent need to scale up tobacco harm reduction if its full public health potential is to be realized.
 
Their first report, No Fire, No Smoke that was published in 2018, documents the history and development of harm reduction, as well as use, availability and regulatory responses to safer nicotine products around the world.
 
|2020
 
|-
 
|The Past, Present, and Future of Land Use in Malawi: A Background Review
 
|MwAPATA Institute
 
|The history of land use, ownership, and development in Malawi is traced from the colonial era to the present. Juxtaposing challenges faced by estate holders and smallholders highlights potential for mutually beneficial partnerships. Examples of land use schemes are probed to explore options for Malawi.
 
|2020
 
|-
 
|}
 
  
 
In September 2020, the Foundation's funding was reduced from USD 80 million in 2019 to USD 45 million in 2020, as confirmed by the tax
 
In September 2020, the Foundation's funding was reduced from USD 80 million in 2019 to USD 45 million in 2020, as confirmed by the tax
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Corporate Europe Observatory published an analysis of leaked documents outlining the lobbying strategy of tobacco giant Philip Morris International , highlighting top 10 Members of European Parliament with the strongest relationship with Philip Morris. They highlighted a top-10 of MEPs with the strongest relations to Philip Morris, including Othmar Karas, Christofer Fjellner and Wim van de Camp.  <ref> Corporate Europe Observatory, [https://web.archive.org/save/https://corporateeurope.org/power-lobbies/2014/06/mediapart-exposes-unhealthy-liaisons-between-french-mep-and-tobacco-industry Mediapart exposes unhealthy liaisons between French MEP and the tobacco industry], June 2014, Accessed 18 November 2018 </ref>
 
Corporate Europe Observatory published an analysis of leaked documents outlining the lobbying strategy of tobacco giant Philip Morris International , highlighting top 10 Members of European Parliament with the strongest relationship with Philip Morris. They highlighted a top-10 of MEPs with the strongest relations to Philip Morris, including Othmar Karas, Christofer Fjellner and Wim van de Camp.  <ref> Corporate Europe Observatory, [https://web.archive.org/save/https://corporateeurope.org/power-lobbies/2014/06/mediapart-exposes-unhealthy-liaisons-between-french-mep-and-tobacco-industry Mediapart exposes unhealthy liaisons between French MEP and the tobacco industry], June 2014, Accessed 18 November 2018 </ref>
  
Philip Morris Intenational wrote to Directorate-General for Health and Food Safety of the European Commission to ask whether the Comission would “officially delay the introduction” of the track and trace system. x
+
Philip Morris Intenational wrote to Directorate-General for Health and Food Safety of the European Commission to ask whether the Comission would “officially delay the introduction” of the track and trace system. <ref>Expose Tobacco, [https://web.archive.org/save/https://exposetobacco.org/wp-content/uploads/EPHA-Report.pdf Targeting the European Commission: The 7 Lobbying Techniques of Big Tobacco], Accessed 13 May 2021 </ref>
  
 
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