AS smokers in Bahrain get used to the mall ban on lighting up, one of the defining features of working life, huddles of smokers enjoying a quick fag break outside the doorway, could become the next target in the war against cigarettes.
The beleaguered smoker’s last refuge – a useful source of office gossip – could be swept away under the expansion of smoking ‘exclusion zones’ if health chiefs follow the lead of their counterparts in Europe.
The EU is now considering a proposal signalling the first move to limit smokers’ right to puff away outdoors. It states that, as well as a ban on lighting up in all workplaces and public buildings, restrictions could also be extended to outdoor areas around entrances to buildings.
Leisure industry spokesman Mark Hastings said: “Bans on smoking indoors are one thing. But most rational people believe bans on smoking in the open air would be a step way too far.”