It’s back! Smoking ban to get tougher in Greece

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Greece said on Tuesday it will enforce a largely ignored smoking ban with hundreds more inspectors, the third time in recent years it has tried but failed to stop the EU's heaviest smokers flouting the ban.
"The Greek state cannot continue to be made a laughing stock," Health Minister Andreas Loverdos told reporters. "We are starting tomorrow — the ban will be fully implemented."
Most cafes and restaurants had shrugged off the latest, September 1 ban and taxi drivers smoke with impunity while driving.
Loverdos said the government would launch a fresh campaign against smoking and hire hundreds of additional inspectors to slap fines on business owners and smokers.
Inspectors can impose up to 10,000 euros in fines on bar and restaurant owners tolerating smoking and up to 500 euros for smokers who break the law. But only a handful of penalties have been imposed despite widespread violations.
Most restaurants have kept ash-trays on their tables despite the ban or put them back after losing customers to more smoker-friendly places. Some organised street protests against the ban, saying applying it would drive customers away at a time when business was already hit by recession.
"This decision comes at a time when the economy is in deep recession, it will lead to shutting down thousands of businesses and at least 80,000 jobs will be lost," said Yiorgos Kavathas, general secretary of the Greek restaurant owners federation.
Smoking-related health costs are 2 bln euros a year, health ministry data said, about 60% of total tobacco tax revenues in 2009.
Greece has increased excise tax and VAT on tobacco to 23% from 19% as part of EU and IMF austerity steps.