Pope Francis has banned the sale of
cigarettes at the Vatican in a bid to lead by example on healthy living. “The
Holy Father has decided that the Vatican will cease to sell cigarettes to
employees by 2018,” the Vatican said in a statement on Thursday.
“The Holy See cannot contribute to an
act that clearly damages the health of people,” it said, adding that smoking
claims more than seven million lives every year, according to the World Health
Organization. “Although the cigarettes sold to employees and pensioners in the
Vatican at a reduced price are a source of revenue for the Holy See, no profit
can be legitimate if it puts lives at risk,” it added. Francis, who has only
one lung, does not smoke. He has let the locals keep their other guilty
pleasure, tax-free alcohol. The cigarettes and booze are sold in a luxury
duty-free shop, opened in 2003 in what was once the Vatican’s magnificent
railway station but is now home to everything from designer handbags and shoes
to flat-screen televisions. Only those with a pass — Vatican employees or
pensioners — can shop there, and many pick up goods, food and even fuel inside
the city for Italian friends on the other side of the tiny state’s imposing
walls.
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