Former Chief Justice Dr Willy Mutunga shreds shisha ban in Kenya. [Photo: Courtesy]

Former Chief Justice Dr Willy Mutunga has questioned Government's banning of the importation, manufacture and sale of shisha in the country.

In a December 28 Tweet, Dr Mutunga said chances were that the Health Cabinet Secretary, Dr Cleopa Mailu, had not consulted the Attorney General Prof Githu Muigai before making the decision.

He added the ban on the substance was not only illegal but also hypocritical and dictatorial.

“The chances are that the CS has not consulted the AG on his constitutional and legal powers to announce such a ban. For a person who doesn’t believe that the right to health is a public good this ban smirks of hypocricy and dictatorship,” Mutunga said in a tweet.

 

 

On Thursday, CS Mailu warned that culprits would be liable to penalty under section 163 of Public Health Act.

“No person shall import, manufacture, sell, offer for sale, use, advertise, promote, facilitate or encourage shisha smoking in Kenya, “read part of the Gazette Notice.

 

 

Lawyer Manwa Hosea (centre) flanked by lawyer Eric Matundura (right) with shisha dealers filing of a petition to challenge the decision by Health CS Cleopa Mailu to ban the stilmulant at the Milimani Law Courts on  December 29. [David Gichuru/Standard]

 

Rwanda outlawed the importation, advertising and smoking of shisha within its territory over health concerns on December 15.

In a public notice, her ministry warned of sanctions to those who would flout the ban on the substance also known as water-pipe tobacco smoking.

Recently, World Health Organisation (WHO) revealed that smoking shisha posed grave health risks as shisha smokers in a single session would inhale smoke of 100 or more cigarettes.

“Cigarette smokers typically take eight to 12 cigarettes with a 40 to 75 millimeter puffs and inhaled 0.5 to 0.6 litres of smoke unlike shisha smoking sessions which typically last 20 to 80 minutes, during which the smoker may take 50 to 200 puffs which range from about 0.15 to 1 litre each,” it said.

The report would further warn of dire consequences for passive smokers.

“Second-hand smoke from waterpipes is a mixture of tobacco smoke in addition to smoke from the fuel applied to burn the tobacco and therefore poses a serious risk for non-smokers,” it pointed out.

Kenya joins Rwanda, Tanzania, Pakistan, Jordan, Singapore and Saudi Arabia in banning the substance

Read more at: https://www.standardmedia.co.ke/health/article/2001264368/government-bans-shisha-in-kenya,

“Shisha includes tobacco products that may be flavoured or non-flavoured that are consumed using a single or multi-stemmed smoking instrument that contains water or other liquid through which the smoke passes before reaching the smoker and which the smoke passes before reaching the smoker and whose syrup tobacco content includes molasses, honey vegetable, glycerol and fruit flavours including apple, grape, lemon and mint,” reads the  WHO report

It’s a favourite with young and trendy revelers and veritable goldmine for pub owners, which would explain why some of them rushed to court on Friday seeking the reversal of the ban.