The World Assembly,
Applauding the efforts of the General Assembly via GAR#459, On Tobacco and Electronic Cigarettes, to reduce the consumption of these products and improve global health through this reduction,
Noting the specificity of the mandates in the resolution, requiring very precise and exact action on the issue at hand, and concerned that specifically the requirement for warning labels to be printed in the local language allows for ways to avoid the mandates by selecting a language technically native to the area but not actually spoken by sizable or majority portions of the native population,
Alarmed by the potential for evading effective labelling for sizable portions of the population in multi-lingual areas, where the language printed on the relevant product is not spoken by a resident of said area,
Recognizing the lack of a clear definition of what constitutes packaging for the products, allowing labels to be placed in hard-to-see locations, as well as the fact that this loophole could mean that the required 30 percent of packaging ends up much smaller than intended if a producer abused this lack of definition to count only small amounts of the effective packaging as the official parts,
Startled by the fact that the exact wording of the warning labels is mandated in this resolution and thus unchangeable, even when scientific developments or other important changes with these products occur and would require an updated label,
Disappointed in the fact that due to previous GA resolutions, such as GAR#299, Legal Competence, it would be very difficult to pass meaningful legislation controlling tobacco usage and addiction without trampling on rights previously afforded to nations by the Assembly,
Acknowledging that the regulations on labelling tobacco products are very likely ineffectual due to the fact that few individuals actually read these labels who are not already fully aware of the dangerous impacts of tobacco, rendering nearly the entirety of the resolution to be useless,
Concluding that GAR#459 serves as a hinderance to any individual nation seeking to pass more effective legislation on the matter, and that it is rather ineffectual in achieving the goals it is intended to reach,
Repeals "On Tobacco and Electronic Cigarettes".