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ASSIST, an NGO working for the development of poor and marginalised communities in rural areas in India, has collaborated with Philip Morris International on 'Prevention of Child labour and Rural Development in tobacco growing villages of Andhra Pradesh & Karnataka' project, focused on school infrastructure development to promote school attendance, income generation activities and building awareness. <ref>[https://web.archive.org/save/https://in.news.yahoo.com/assist-partners-philip-morris-international-054152147.html ASSIST partners with Philip Morris International; committing towards elimination of child labour], ''Yahoo'', 20 November 2020, Accessed 26 February 2021 </ref>
 
ASSIST, an NGO working for the development of poor and marginalised communities in rural areas in India, has collaborated with Philip Morris International on 'Prevention of Child labour and Rural Development in tobacco growing villages of Andhra Pradesh & Karnataka' project, focused on school infrastructure development to promote school attendance, income generation activities and building awareness. <ref>[https://web.archive.org/save/https://in.news.yahoo.com/assist-partners-philip-morris-international-054152147.html ASSIST partners with Philip Morris International; committing towards elimination of child labour], ''Yahoo'', 20 November 2020, Accessed 26 February 2021 </ref>
  
In July 2020, Philip Morris International launched an advertising campaign designed to raise awareness of the trade in fraudulent personal protective equipment amid the COVID-19 crisis, and spotlight the resources available to combat the trade in these goods. The campaign ran for two months across the U.S. and was supported by other private industry brand integrity leaders and organizations dedicated to fighting illicit trade, including: U.S. Chamber of Commerce, United States Council for International Business (USCIB) , Transnational Alliance to Combat Illicit Trade (TRACIT), Merck & Co., Inc., Procter & Gamble Company, Tommy Hilfiger, Under Armour, SAS, Anti-Counterfeiting and Product Protection Center at Michigan State University and Luna Global Networks. <ref>PMI, [https://web.archive.org/save/https://www.pmi.com/media-center/press-releases/press-details/?newsId=22641 Philip Morris International Launches COVID-19 Anti-Fraudulent Goods Campaign], 14 July 2020, Accessed 5 October 2020</ref>
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In July 2020, Philip Morris International launched an advertising campaign designed to raise awareness of the trade in fraudulent personal protective equipment amid the COVID-19 crisis, and spotlight the resources available to combat the trade in these goods. The campaign ran for two months across the U.S. and was supported by other private industry brand integrity leaders and organizations dedicated to fighting illicit trade, including: U.S. Chamber of Commerce, United States Council for International Business (USCIB) , Transnational Alliance to Combat Illicit Trade (TRACIT), Merck & Co., Inc., Procter & Gamble Company, Tommy Hilfiger, Under Armour, SAS, Anti-Counterfeiting and Product Protection Center at Michigan State University and Luna Global Networks. <ref>PMI, [https://www.pmi.com/media-center/press-releases/press-details/?newsId=22641 Philip Morris International Launches COVID-19 Anti-Fraudulent Goods Campaign], 14 July 2020, Accessed 5 October 2020</ref>
  
Philip Morris International sponsored Djakarta Warehouse Project, one of Asia’s biggest dance music festivals. Throughout the festival there were bright Marlboro signs over bars and benches where people sat smoking. There was a Marlboro “Discover Room” with interactive red, blue and yellow booths, echoing cigarette branding, and an arcade game. The festival’s shops sold only Marlboro-branded cigarettes and the company employed attractive saleswomen to roam around promoting the products. <ref name="PMI_FEST">[https://web.archive.org/save/https://www.thebureauinvestigates.com/stories/2020-02-24/the-unsmoke-screen-the-truth-behind-pmis-cigarette-free-future The ‘Unsmoke’ screen: the truth behind PMI’s cigarette-free future], ''The Bureau of Investigative Journalism'', 24 February 2020, Accessed 14 April 2020 </ref> The company has also sponsored Iqos-branded parties for Playboy magazine in Germany and Cosmopolitan magazine in Russia. {{r|PMI_FEST|}} Philip Morris (Pakistan) partnered with Network of Organizations Working with Persons with Disabilities for an anti-littering campaign. The campaign aims to provide economic empowerment for persons with disabilities by providing retro-fitted vehicles for them to operate as they collect litter from different areas to recycle waste, as well as help clean up Pakistan. <ref>[https://web.archive.org/save/https://www.biztoday.news/2020/08/19/philip-morris-handing-over-vehicles-to-persons-with-disabilities/ Philip Morris handing over vehicles to persons with disabilities], ''Biz Today'', 19 August 2020, Accessed 24 August 2020</ref>
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Philip Morris International sponsored Djakarta Warehouse Project, one of Asia’s biggest dance music festivals. Throughout the festival there were bright Marlboro signs over bars and benches where people sat smoking. There was a Marlboro “Discover Room” with interactive red, blue and yellow booths, echoing cigarette branding, and an arcade game. The festival’s shops sold only Marlboro-branded cigarettes and the company employed attractive saleswomen to roam around promoting the products. <ref name="PMI_FEST">[https://www.thebureauinvestigates.com/stories/2020-02-24/the-unsmoke-screen-the-truth-behind-pmis-cigarette-free-future The ‘Unsmoke’ screen: the truth behind PMI’s cigarette-free future], ''The Bureau of Investigative Journalism'', 24 February 2020, Accessed 14 April 2020 </ref> The company has also sponsored Iqos-branded parties for Playboy magazine in Germany and Cosmopolitan magazine in Russia. {{r|PMI_FEST|}} Philip Morris (Pakistan) partnered with Network of Organizations Working with Persons with Disabilities for an anti-littering campaign. The campaign aims to provide economic empowerment for persons with disabilities by providing retro-fitted vehicles for them to operate as they collect litter from different areas to recycle waste, as well as help clean up Pakistan. <ref>[https://www.biztoday.news/2020/08/19/philip-morris-handing-over-vehicles-to-persons-with-disabilities/ Philip Morris handing over vehicles to persons with disabilities], ''Biz Today'', 19 August 2020, Accessed 24 August 2020</ref>
  
Philip Morris International has been sponsoring Israeli medical students with 14,000 shekels (about USD4,000) in exchange for a year of intensive exposure to corporate informational materials, conferences and lectures about tobacco. <ref> [https://web.archive.org/save/https://www.thebureauinvestigates.com/stories/2020-02-24/the-unsmoke-screen-the-truth-behind-pmis-cigarette-free-future Philip Morris Offers Israeli Medical Students Grants for Attending Lectures], ''Haaretz'', 4 December 2019, Accessed 24 January 2020 </ref>
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Philip Morris International has been sponsoring Israeli medical students with 14,000 shekels (about USD4,000) in exchange for a year of intensive exposure to corporate informational materials, conferences and lectures about tobacco. <ref> [https://www.haaretz.com/israel-news/.premium-philip-morris-offers-israeli-medical-students-grants-for-attending-lectures-1.8221762 Philip Morris Offers Israeli Medical Students Grants for Attending Lectures], ''Haaretz'', 4 December 2019, Accessed 24 January 2020 </ref>
  
According to a ten-month study by tobacco researchers at Stanford University, Philip Morris International markets through IQOS throughout Europe - in lounges at mountainside resorts in the Pyrenees, fashionable neighborhoods of Rome. Philip Morris International has partnered with "IQOS friendly" bars and restaurants - closed to cigarettes but open to IQOS. Such promotions are part of a wide-ranging "normalization" strategy by Philip Morris to scrub its image as a purveyor of cancer-causing cigarettes and present its new smoking alternatives as youthful, upscale lifestyle products. At Germany's Bambi Awards for the media industry in November 2019, celebrities posed for red-carpet photos against a backdrop of IQOS. Instagram postings for Be Like Me, a Romanian marketing agency, show young women posing with the IQOS device in recent months, often wearing robe-like uniforms in malls. The Instagram account for RBT Group, a staffing agency in Russia that markets IQOS, similarly shows photos of attractive young women in front of IQOS signs or posing with other "coaches." Be Like Me and RBT Group could not be reached for comment. Philip Morris worked with British sculptor Alex Chinneck on a dramatic installation at the 2019 Milan Design Week. The work depicted the facade of an old, two-story building being unzipped like a pair of jeans - meant to signify the IQOS "notion of opening the future," the sculptor said in an interview with FAD magazine. The company also worked with distinguished industrial designer Karim Rashid to create an installation at the previous year's Milan Design Week. In an interview with website fashionrepublik.com, Rashid described his installation, showing two faces meeting one another, as similar to the IQOS, which he called "an intimate device that speaks to forward-thinking and original expression. At a launch party for IQOS in Albania in 2019, a performer in an elaborate white sequined dress did an interpretive dance on stage with an IQOS, while another performer attached to wires performed acrobatic moves in the air while playing a violin. <ref>[https://web.archive.org/save/https://www.devdiscourse.com/article/international/884048-insight-inside-the-philip-morris-campaign-to-normalize-a-tobacco-device%20INSIGHT-Inside the Philip Morris campaign to 'normalize' a tobacco device], ''Devdiscourse'', 21 February 2020, Accessed 6 March 2020 </ref>
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According to a ten-month study by tobacco researchers at Stanford University, Philip Morris International markets through IQOS throughout Europe - in lounges at mountainside resorts in the Pyrenees, fashionable neighborhoods of Rome. Philip Morris International has partnered with "IQOS friendly" bars and restaurants - closed to cigarettes but open to IQOS. Such promotions are part of a wide-ranging "normalization" strategy by Philip Morris to scrub its image as a purveyor of cancer-causing cigarettes and present its new smoking alternatives as youthful, upscale lifestyle products. At Germany's Bambi Awards for the media industry in November 2019, celebrities posed for red-carpet photos against a backdrop of IQOS. Instagram postings for Be Like Me, a Romanian marketing agency, show young women posing with the IQOS device in recent months, often wearing robe-like uniforms in malls. The Instagram account for RBT Group, a staffing agency in Russia that markets IQOS, similarly shows photos of attractive young women in front of IQOS signs or posing with other "coaches." Be Like Me and RBT Group could not be reached for comment. Philip Morris worked with British sculptor Alex Chinneck on a dramatic installation at the 2019 Milan Design Week. The work depicted the facade of an old, two-story building being unzipped like a pair of jeans - meant to signify the IQOS "notion of opening the future," the sculptor said in an interview with FAD magazine. The company also worked with distinguished industrial designer Karim Rashid to create an installation at the previous year's Milan Design Week. In an interview with website fashionrepublik.com, Rashid described his installation, showing two faces meeting one another, as similar to the IQOS, which he called "an intimate device that speaks to forward-thinking and original expression. At a launch party for IQOS in Albania in 2019, a performer in an elaborate white sequined dress did an interpretive dance on stage with an IQOS, while another performer attached to wires performed acrobatic moves in the air while playing a violin. <ref>[https://www.devdiscourse.com/article/international/884048-insight-inside-the-philip-morris-campaign-to-normalize-a-tobacco-device INSIGHT-Inside the Philip Morris campaign to 'normalize' a tobacco device], ''Devdiscourse'', 21 February 2020, Accessed 6 March 2020 </ref>
  
Malaysian publisher, The Edge and Philip Morris Malaysia hosted a champagne brunch with a special viewing of the tobacco company’s photography exhibition "Unsmoke: Through The Lens of Malaysians". The exhibition featured the works of three prominent Malaysian photographers — David Lok, SC Shekar and Nadirah Zakariya — who each had three weeks to interpret what the term “Unsmoke” means to them, with the guidance and curation of gallerist, Lim Wei-Ling of Wei-Ling Gallery. <ref> [https://web.archive.org/save/https://www.optionstheedge.com/topic/events/photo-exhibition-philip-morris-malaysia-x-edge-imagines-better-world-without-smoke Photo exhibition by Philip Morris Malaysia x The Edge imagines a better world without smoke], ''Options Edge'', 6 December 2019, Accessed 24 January 2020 </ref>
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Malaysian publisher, The Edge and Philip Morris Malaysia hosted a champagne brunch with a special viewing of the tobacco company’s photography exhibition "Unsmoke: Through The Lens of Malaysians". The exhibition featured the works of three prominent Malaysian photographers — David Lok, SC Shekar and Nadirah Zakariya — who each had three weeks to interpret what the term “Unsmoke” means to them, with the guidance and curation of gallerist, Lim Wei-Ling of Wei-Ling Gallery. <ref> [https://www.optionstheedge.com/topic/events/photo-exhibition-philip-morris-malaysia-x-edge-imagines-better-world-without-smoke Photo exhibition by Philip Morris Malaysia x The Edge imagines a better world without smoke], ''Options Edge'', 6 December 2019, Accessed 24 January 2020 </ref>
  
Refurbishments of the Swiss Vaud Fine Arts Museum were partly financed by private sponsors, including Philip Morris International, which gave CHF390,000 (USD 397,500) towards construction work and CHF 50,222 for running costs. <ref>[https://web.archive.org/save/https://www.swissinfo.ch/eng/culture/tobacco-culture_should-swiss-museums-and-festivals-accept-tobacco-industry-money-/45445906 Should Swiss museums and festivals accept tobacco industry money?], ''Swiss Info'', 19 December 2019, Accessed 24 January 2020 </ref>
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Refurbishments of the Swiss Vaud Fine Arts Museum were partly financed by private sponsors, including Philip Morris International, which gave CHF390,000 (USD 397,500) towards construction work and CHF 50,222 for running costs. <ref>[https://www.swissinfo.ch/eng/culture/tobacco-culture_should-swiss-museums-and-festivals-accept-tobacco-industry-money-/45445906 Should Swiss museums and festivals accept tobacco industry money?], ''Swiss Info'', 19 December 2019, Accessed 24 January 2020 </ref>
  
 
===Brand-washing===
 
===Brand-washing===

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