Faculty of Public Health and Policy, London School of Hygiene and Tropical Medicine, 15-17 Tavistock Place, London, WC1H 9SH, UK.
Department of Social Policy and Social Work, University of York, York, UK.
Global Health. 2018 Aug 2;14(1):79. doi: 10.1186/s12992-018-0386-1.
Article 5.3 of the World Health Organization's Framework Convention on Tobacco Control (FCTC) requires Parties to the agreement to take proactive measures to protect health policy from the vested interests of the tobacco industry. Parties to the FCTC are required to submit periodic reports to the Convention Secretariat on the efforts undertaken to implement it. Previous analyses of national compliance with the FCTC suggest that Article 5.3 implementation is piecemeal and insufficient in many contexts, with governments relying on general transparency and other existing policies for the purpose of Article 5.3 implementation. No in-depth study of Article 5.3 compliance within the European Union (EU) - a signatory to the Convention - has been undertaken. This study seeks to assess the extent of Article 5.3 compliance in European Union institutions, through an analysis of the mechanisms in place in the European Commission and European Parliament. It analyses EU documents relevant to Article 5.3 compliance, as well as semi-structured interviews with policy actors in the EU institutions and the field of tobacco control.
As with many national governments, Article 5.3 compliance within EU institutions is partial and incomplete. Much of the compliance activity cited in EU reports is derived from general codes of conduct for EU staff and the Juncker Commission's transparency agenda. Interview respondents reveal widespread lack of knowledge about the existence of the FCTC and Article 5.3 amongst key policy actors across the institutions. Within the Commission policies vary greatly between Directorates General, and issues surrounding the conceptualisation of the role of Members of the European Parliament affect implementation in that context. While there is growing awareness of the issue in both the Commission and the Parliament, in large part as a result of the experience of lobbying over the Tobacco Products Directive, there remains considerable resistance in both institutions to further substantive action to implement Article 5.3.
We recommend that a binding and comprehensive policy and code of conduct, specifically designed for the implementation of Article 5.3 and based on the World Health Organization's guidelines, be created to cover the activities of all employees of all EU institutions. Crucially, such guidelines would need to deal explicitly with third parties acting for the tobacco industry.
世界卫生组织《烟草控制框架公约》(FCTC)第 5.3 条要求协议各方采取积极措施,使卫生政策免受烟草业既得利益的影响。FCTC 的缔约方需向公约秘书处定期报告为执行该公约而作出的努力。对各国遵守 FCTC 的情况进行的先前分析表明,在许多情况下,第 5.3 条的执行是零碎的,而且不充分,各国政府依靠一般透明度和其他现有政策来执行第 5.3 条。没有对《公约》签署方之一的欧盟内部第 5.3 条的遵守情况进行深入研究。本研究旨在通过分析欧盟委员会和欧洲议会现有的机制,评估欧盟机构内第 5.3 条的遵守程度。它分析了与第 5.3 条遵守情况有关的欧盟文件,以及与欧盟机构和烟草控制领域的政策行为者进行的半结构化访谈。
与许多国家政府一样,欧盟机构内第 5.3 条的遵守情况是局部的和不完整的。欧盟报告中提到的许多遵守活动都源于欧盟工作人员的一般行为准则和容克委员会的透明度议程。接受采访的政策行为者表示,各机构内的主要政策行为者普遍不知道《公约》和第 5.3 条的存在。在委员会内,各总司之间的政策差异很大,而欧洲议会成员作用概念化方面的问题影响到这方面的执行。虽然委员会和议会都越来越意识到这个问题,在很大程度上是因为在烟草产品指令方面的游说经验,但这两个机构都仍然强烈反对采取进一步的实质性行动来执行第 5.3 条。
我们建议制定一项具有约束力的、全面的政策和行为准则,专门用于执行第 5.3 条,并以世界卫生组织的准则为基础,涵盖所有欧盟机构所有雇员的活动。至关重要的是,这些准则需要明确处理代表烟草业行事的第三方。