UK city to ban all cigarettes in campaign to 'de-normalise' smoking

Liverpool will be smoke-free by 2030 after the council approved plans to ban cigarettes in public spaces.

By Chris Riches, North-West Correspondent

No smoking metal sign in the park

Liverpool will be smoke-free by 2030 (Image: Getty)

The city council said it wanted to “de-normalise” smoking by barring it and using existing laws to step up controls on tobacco.

The authority said about 17% of residents were smokers who average £2,500-a-year spent on the lethal habit.

There are no smoke-free UK cities but Bristol is tipped to be first as it is piloting smoke-free public spaces.

Liverpool said: “The council wants a smoke-free city allowing all its communities to live longer, healthier and wealthier where they can play and work without exposure to the harms

of tobacco smoke.

“In addition to causing avoidable illness smoking creates a greater burden for the most disadvantaged.”

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