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Mexico Bans Import of All Vaping Products, Cites WHO Guidance
2020-02-29
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Mexico Bans Import of All Vaping Products, Cites WHO Guidance


Mexico has banned the import of all vaping products by presidential decree. The new law, which took effect on Feb. 20, bans all products, including zero-nicotine e-liquid and even hardware sold without e-juice.
Ironically, one of the positions that helped President Andrés Manuel Lopez Obrador earn a landslide victory in the 2018 election was his opposition to the prohibitionist war on drugs and support for legalizing cannabis. But Lopez Obrador’s vaping policy is purely prohibitionist. The president uses a variety of evidence-free health justifications for the ban, and cites the recommendation of the influential World Health Organization.
“That it has been reported that the use of these devices generates inflammation of the respiratory tract, the increase of white blood cells, as well as bilateral pulmonary opacities (spots in the lung), low oxygenation of the blood or even respiratory failure, in addition to an increased sensitivity of airway cells to viral infections,” says the presidential decree. “Its long-term use is expected to increase the risk of chronic obstructive pulmonary disease and lung cancer.”
In addition to claiming vaping causes chronic lung disease, Lopez Obrador’s decree strongly implies that nicotine vaping products are responsible for some of the U.S. vaping-related lung injuries known to be caused by illicit THC cartridges diluted with vitamin E acetate. He does this by using old data—like a CDC alert from Sept. 11—and by not explaining that many early cases involved patients who lied about their use of illegal cannabis oil products.
However, the primary reason cited for the ban is the ideology of the World Health Organization (WHO) and its Bloomberg-funded tobacco control arm the Framework Convention for Tobacco Control (FCTC). Lopez Obrador’s decree lists vaping risks promoted in various FCTC documents—including purported dangers to bystanders by second hand vapor.
“…WHO concluded that health risks for people in the environment exposed to the aerosol exhaled by [vaping product] users, turns out to be a new source of air pollution by particles, including fine and ultrafine particles, as well such as 1,2-propanediol, certain Volatile Organic Compounds (VOCs) and heavy metals (such as nickel and chromium), and nicotine; therefore, the increase in the concentration of toxic substances in the foreign aerosol, in relation to ambient air levels , represents a greater risk to the health of any exposed person.”
The bottom line for Mexico is that WHO/FCTC recommends prohibition when possible, and the government thinks it’s possible. Countries that follow WHO dogma on e-cigarette policy are rewarded with huge grants for public health programs that employ many people. Much of the funding for the WHO’s tobacco control programs is provided by former New York City mayor Michael Bloomberg, who is now running for the Democratic nomination in this year’s U.S. presidential race.
“…[The] Framework Convention of the World Health Organization for Tobacco Control recognized that [FCTC member countries] have already adopted different regulatory strategies with respect to [vaping products],” says the presidential decree, “such as the total ban on their sale, for which they invite their members to consider taking measures in accordance with their national legislation;

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