Smoking everywhere

river-rat
By river-rat

Are the no smoking signs just up for decorative reasons? To brighten the place up, add a little colour. I was in Villagio, wanted to go the Starbucks for an iced coffee (YUM) with my toddler and baby. No Smoking signs everywhere and puffing people at every table. I don't see why my kids have to sit in a smoky,unhealthy environment. Possibly the staff, underpaid waiters, cleaners, chefs etc in these restaurants are just too scared to ask people to put out their cigarettes. Who knows who you are going to offend - could be on the next plane home! what i don't get is that a really large international brand like Starbucks doesn't have the balls to enforce the rules. Is it also okay to spit on the floor,pick your nose, whatever in these places because no-one has the authority or guts to ask you to stop doing something others might find offensive?
When are these restaurants going to partition off smoking sections or just get tough?

By Scorpio• 15 May 2007 02:38
Rating: 2/5
Scorpio

I'm not defending it, but part of Arab culture is smoking....it's all over the region.....not just Doha! You know how we have bars, drink anywhere and everywhere in the West, they smoke everywhere...something you have to put up with! Dont go to Dubai, the malls are full of people smoking.

By e46M3• 14 May 2007 17:48
Rating: 2/5
e46M3

As Gypsy said, Rome wasn't built in a day, and this country only started really being built over the past 6 or 7 years.

I agree, the roads are a mess, inflation is high, the medical facilities are stretched and so many other criticisms.

But please remember the regional context; Qatar is not bordered by Sweden and Denmark. Reminds me of the accusations of corruption levelled at the Palestinian Authority which is also not bordered by Scandinavian nations.

At least here I know the health inspectors aren't on the take and won't grab a quick buck to let some bad meat slide through and be sold to the public. Here my kids go out and don't hear swear words everywhere as they do in Lebanon, here as in the UK, Helloqatar, they use speed traps to document traffic violations and here a policeman or school or embassy detail doesn't use his side-arm and government issue weapon to vent his superiority complex on people.

Let's not start the Qatar and Qatari bashing thing again because it's completely unobjective.

By shazbat• 14 May 2007 17:34
shazbat

Just read disillusioned's link - VERY interesting.

------------------------------------------------------------

"Every adult of sound mind, should be able to choose to do whatever they want, as long as they cause no harm to others".

By e46M3• 14 May 2007 17:30
Rating: 4/5
e46M3

It's not just Qatar, it's an affliction of the whole Arab and Islamic world with very few exceptions. It's extremely unfortunate.

We might live in Qatar but we have to see the bigger picture.

By Gypsy• 14 May 2007 17:24
Gypsy

The Royal Family is doing a LOT for this country river rat, but Rome wasn't built in a day and you sure as hell can't change ingrained Arab attitudes over night. Rich doesn't neccessarily mean smart or aware.

[img_assist|nid=13228|title=I feel your scorn and I accept it-Jon Stewart|desc=|link=none|align=left|width=180|height=180]

By river-rat• 14 May 2007 17:20
river-rat

i'm really disappointed in certain aspects of Qatar. the ruling families/wealthy qatari's' obviously have had a good education/enough money and should as such be quite worldly with regards to these concerns. Driving,(risky - scary land cruisers,potholes and no cops) one wonders what the local municipalities are actually doing in their area's or do they not exist. It seems that any substantial work done to aesthetically improve the dust bowl we have chosen to live in is undone one week later and the rest of the town is like a squatter camp interspersed with bulldozers, half built villa's too big for any normal family( who lives in these castles?) and mounds of sand and rubbish. Had to have the medical for rp the other day, bits of bloody cotton wool/gauze on the floor of the medical commission - really hygienic. No smoking bans ineffective, people stuck in deportation camps for months, road workers who have to sleep on top of each other due to a lack of space/beds, people who are quite happy to put their maids in cupboards under the stairs with a mattress. Sounds good hey? Now that i think about it i feel quite bad moaning about all this, at least i can afford an iced coffee at Starbucks - that is an entire day's wage for some or maybe a lot of people in this country. Shame!

By disillusioned• 14 May 2007 17:12
disillusioned

If you really want to know the truth about smoking, and other laws, read this link!!

http://www.forestonline.org/files/pdf/SMOKE,%20LIES%20A4%20v5b.pdf

By Helloqatar• 14 May 2007 16:38
Rating: 5/5
Helloqatar

Till some of these things change, laws are enforced for everyone, etc. Qatar will continue to be a dirty 3rd world country. Look at the trash, look at the people smoking in front of no smoking signs, look at drivers, nobody respects the Emir or his laws, if they did they wouldn't flaunt them or ignore them.

That is why they use speed cameras, so a badly trained under-respected police force doesn't have to do anything.

The way I understand Islam, smoking is wrong, doesn't seem to bother many Muslims in Qatar. The only thing is more and more smoker will die and we will have more and more medical cost to break the bank.

By anonymous• 14 May 2007 16:33
anonymous

Feel proud to be in Qatar

By e46M3• 14 May 2007 16:19
Rating: 5/5
e46M3

I think it's in the Arab psyche, lack of discipline and a total disinterest in it.

I took my son to the hospital this morning. There's no point in standing in line. Everything is horizontal. That's when you're not needled in the back, have an arm extended over your shoulder and other people's kids in between your legs.

In the waiting area two TVs blaring different programs and outside people smoking next to the "don't smoke here" sign.

People walk into the elevators going to visit inpatients carrying food in bags, cartons and even pots and pans...

By JoeKanuck• 14 May 2007 15:28
JoeKanuck

...about 6 months ago. Quitting is the hardest thing I've ever done...and it's been the same each time I've tried. It really truly, madly, deeply sucks.

Every single day there is at least one time where I really want one. I know, if I have the one, I'm screwed again totally.

I didn't worry about the medical aspects; I just got tired of being a slave to the delicious little bastards.

By novita77• 14 May 2007 15:12
novita77

same old story ... you can put million non smoking sign everywhere ... if nobody enforce it ... it will not making any difference.

once my 5 yrs old son walked to the next table, a qatari guy smoking ... and he asked this guy why he smoke when there is no-smoking sign in the table??? i guess my son embarrased this guy and he came to our table and gave him a sweet.

my ages have shortened by 10 yrs during my 6 yrs living in doha.

By Don Masri• 14 May 2007 15:11
Don Masri

There must be a cure for smoking!!! And don't tell me "where there is a will, there is a way"!

***The biggest risk in life, is not taking one!***

By anonymous• 14 May 2007 15:08
anonymous

HA. me same same you

By anonymous• 14 May 2007 15:05
anonymous

Who says laws are not enforced. Once my college spit on the road and enviornment guys in civil caught him. He had to pay QR 300 as a fine. :) I know it is one off incident but they enforced the law once in a blue moon

By Don Masri• 14 May 2007 14:50
Rating: 5/5
Don Masri

I know exactly what you are going through. I am a smoker and I have a 7 month baby boy. I -as any other parent- want the best for him and constantly do the best to protect him. I really think twice before going anywhere with my wife and son due to smoking that is (allegedly banned). Second hand smoke has proven to be more fatal than direct smoke. I do not smoke in my house or anywhere there are children.

I wish that other smokers could understand the seriousness and fatality that second hand smoke could impact people around us!

I truly want to quit smoking, but I enjoy it too much!

***The biggest risk in life, is not taking one!***

By river-rat• 14 May 2007 14:15
river-rat

don't even get me started on the @#$%,. land cruisers - have recently updated my will, and started saying my prayers!

By JoeKanuck• 14 May 2007 14:10
Rating: 3/5
JoeKanuck

...now you're just talking crazy...next you'll be saying people should be polite to other people and not shout at complete strangers because they are in the service industry.

I suppose you also want land cruisers to drive more than 10cm from your bumper...jeez.

We just don't need that kind of radical thinking here. That kind of talk leads to communism and stuff.

By Cnidaria• 14 May 2007 14:05
Rating: 5/5
Cnidaria

It is a bit like those white markings on the road, they are very pretty and good decoration but somebody joking told me we are meant to drive within these "lanes".... crazy i know. I mean that would mean i have to plan an appraoch to a R/A and be in the correct lane! cheeky and more than one car could go around a R/A at a time, how efficient and certainly not T.I.Q. style

By e46M3• 14 May 2007 13:51
Rating: 5/5
e46M3

It's the same everywhere, river-rat, laws are passed but are unenforced.

Smoking, handicapped-parking, talking on the mobile, spitting (it's an offence)...

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