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Barack Obama bans e-cigarettes for children but not child labour on tobacco farms

Human Rights Watch says some children working on tobacco farms reported symptoms consistent with acute nicotine poisoning

Samuel Osborne
Wednesday 11 May 2016 03:49 EDT
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'Sofia,' a 17-year-old, works in a tobacco field in North Carolina
'Sofia,' a 17-year-old, works in a tobacco field in North Carolina (Benedict Evans/Human Rights Watch)

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Children as young as 12 will still be allowed to work on US tobacco farms despite new regulations banning the sale of e-cigarettes to under-18s, Human Rights Watch has said.

Although President Barack Obama's administration has extended the FDA's authority to include all tobacco products, including e-cigarettes, 12-year-olds can still work 50 to 60 hours a week outside of school on tobacco farms.

According to HRW, some children working on farms in North Carolina, Kentucky, Tennessee and Virginia have reported vomiting, nausea, headaches and dizziness while working with tobacco leaves.

(Human Rights Watch)

The group warned the symptoms were consistent with acute nicotine poisoning.

They also suggest some of the pesticides commonly used in tobacco farming are known neurotoxins, which can destroy nerve tissue.

Under US law, children cannot work on farms during school hours, but they can work in the field at other times.

Hours typically increase in the summer, when school is not in session and the tobacco crop season is at its peak.

"If the administration can implement a ban on e-cigarettes for children in 90 days," a spokesperson for Human Rights Watch said, "it can ban children from working with toxic tobacco plants."

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