UAE | Health
Municipality to crack down on shisha cafes by year end
The Municipality will be cracking down on shisha cafes that do not comply with anti-smoking laws by the end of the year.
- The municipality is hoping that limiting the places where smoking is allowed will encourage smokers to give up.
- Image Credit: Gulf News Archive
Dubai: The Municipality will be cracking down on shisha cafes that do not comply with anti-smoking laws by the end of the year.
Cafes have had nearly a year to move to new premises if their floor area is smaller than stipulated in the new regulations.
Since the smoking ban rules were introduced for restaurants and cafes on November 18 last year, approximately 25 restaurants have been fined Dh5,000 to Dh10,000.
Current regulations state that buildings should be 1,500 sq ft, and those that are smaller than this will have to move to bigger premises if they wish to continue selling shisha or allow smoking.
Salem Bin Mesmar, Assistant Director-General, Dubai Municipality, Health, Safety and Environment Control Sector said: "We do not like shisha in Dubai and we're concentrating on this. We have given cafes until the end of the year to follow the new conditions. If they think that by the end of this year we are not going to do anything, no, they have to know that we are serious about it. If we have to close them down, we will."
Mindset
Zuhoor Al Sabbagh, Director of Public Health Services Department, confirmed that cafes had been reminded of the regulations by letter. Shisha cafes in residential areas have been asked to relocate.
Mesmar confirmed the ultimate goal was to provide education to encourage people to give up smoking.
"We are trying to change the mindset. Human behaviour is such that you have to implement this strongly. We have to educate them and squeeze them into corners, so there is nowhere to smoke and then they stop."
A team of inspectors is also visiting grocery stores on a daily basis to ensure stickers informing customers of the under-20 cigarette sales ban are being displayed.
Selling cigarettes to under-20s was banned at the end of May.
He also confirmed there were no plans at this time to move cigarettes from behind cash counters.
Dubai Municipality has announced the fourth phase of its programme to ban smoking in public areas. The new regulations target "entertainment and recreation places," which includes snooker halls and internet cafes.
The municipality signed an MoU with Dubai Sports Council to implement this phase in public sporting areas, including youth clubs.
Venues wishing to have a smoking area should apply for a licence from the Department of Economic Development and need to be no less then 2,000 sq ft and have a playing area of 1,500 sq ft.
Stop sale in stores
Dubai Municipality has said its ultimate goal is to ban the sale of cigarettes from grocery stores.
Salem Bin Mesmar, Assistant Director-General, DM, Health, Safety and Environment Control Sector, said: "We hope at one stage that cigarettes will not be sold in at least grocery stores. Stopping supermarkets selling big cartons is not under discussion yet. It is a good idea, but our programme just started officially nine months to one year ago; you have to give us some time."
Share this article
Related Articles
Popular in UAE

-
Have your say
Living in untidy homes
Do you think that people who live in untidy homes have bad character?
Latest news
- Complaints against cab drivers decline
- Camel in RAK gives birth to twins
- No hike in water, electricity rates
- Thalassaemia website 'will help educate youth'
- Saif is appointed Emiratisation chief
- Experts call for reviewing green cost of desalination
- Readers: Less water usage means less desalination
- Dubai Police open centre to combat marine pollution
- Pavement parking irks pedestrians
- Man jailed 3 years in fatal assault of colleague
- Murder: Mother gets stiffer sentence
- Traffic Prosecution adopts humanitarian step
- 'All-green' project to ease traffic flow
- UAE starts administering H1N1 vaccines
- Diplomacy: Envoys received
Community Reports
-
Pavement parking irks pedestrians
Gulf News reader calls on authorities to step in and stop car owners from invading pathways meant for safe walking
-
Faded parking lines pose a problem
Motorists could be fined for parking incorrectly even though they can hardly see the boundaries in the designated areas
-
School buses block residential parking
Commercial vehicles taking up free parking facilities in Al Wuheida, inconveniencing residents in surrounding villas
-
Community report: Doing their bit for poor children
A group of students takes concrete action to raise funds for Dubai Cares


