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Today, state-run radio airs public service announcements about the benefits of quitting, and cigarette packs carry health warnings. Cigarette dispensing machines have disappeared. Authorities began phasing out the tobacco ration in the 1990s and fully eliminated it in 2010. Castro even joked about the ills of smoking cigars, saying "the best thing to do is give them to your enemy." Still, government numbers say as many as four of every 10 Cubans smoke -- though that's way down from estimates of 60 to 70 percent in the 1970s. Cuba has had a resolution on the books since 2005 banning smoking in theaters, stores, buses, taxis, restaurants and other enclosed public areas. But many are unaware of the law, and it's common to see people brazenly light up practically anywhere they theoretically shouldn't: offices, stairwells, elevators, buses, trains. Farmers rise early to tend their crops with cigars dangling from the lip, and even elderly women meander through crumbling city streets chomping on soggy cigar stubs. "This is a country of smokers, a country with an important tobacco tradition," Sibori said. "Changing habits that form part of our roots is very difficult. I imagine that little by little things will be implemented so that this takes shape, but I still think there is much work to be done." The Habaguanex initiative is also being carried out with zero fanfare, and no announcement in state-run media. On a recent afternoon in El Mercurio cafe, tables were packed with French tourists chowing down on pork loin, rice, beans and fried plantains. Missing was the stale, smoky haze that used to hang over the tables. Waiters said they appreciate going home at night in clothing that doesn't smell like an ashtray. Chefs take smoke breaks outside the back door without apparent complaint. There's still some clandestine indoor smoking at some places late at night when most clients are gone, however. "Why not?" said Thomas Gabrisch, a Dusseldorf, Germany, music professor who was puffing on a slender cigarillo outside El Mercurio, when asked if he was OK with the indoor ban. "I think (smoking) bothers a lot of people. For me it would not be a problem ... But I think a lot of people would like to stay inside." That sentiment was echoed by Dirk Brodersen, one of the aficionados from Hamburg, who said it was an adventure to be able to smoke the previous night at a basement music club. "What is Cuba? Rum, cigars, sun and people," Brodersen said. "Cuban jazz without a cigar
-- not so good."
[Associated
Press;
Copyright 2012 The Associated Press. All rights reserved. This material may not be published, broadcast, rewritten or redistributed.
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