The figure of underage Nigerians using tobacco products daily currently stands at 25,000.
Nigerian activists under the aegis of the Tobacco Free Nigeria stated this in Abuja on Tuesday.
Uwagboe called on government to enforce the law banning the sale of tobacco products to the underage to check such smokers in the country.
“Every day, a whooping 25,000 children in Nigeria between the ages of 10 and 14 years use tobacco products,’ said Ebiuwa Uwagboe, a campaign specialist at Gatefield, the public strategy group backing the campaign.
“This equates to 17 children smoking every one minute.
“This is a result of the relative ease of their access to cigarettes and other tobacco related products, which are sold to them by vendors,” she said.
According to her, smoking among teenagers has devastating consequences including respiratory and cardiovascular diseases as well as reduced mental development.
“Children must be protected as they lack capacity and are often unwitting targets of the tobacco industry,” she said.
She noted that a recent survey released by Gatefield discovered that one out of every four vendors sold cigarettes to kids in the country.
The Nigerian Tobacco act of 2015 prohibits the sale of tobacco products to minors under the age of 18 but that the law was not being implemented or enforced.
“While it is important to have the right laws, it is not enough. We need to enforce them now and ensure that the National Assembly passes the tobacco control regulations.
“This is what our campaign aims to do,” she added.
She further said that the #DontWaitRegulate campaign also released two public service advertisements to create awareness about the existing law and pressure government to properly enforce it with the passage of the regulations by the national assembly.
The advertisement featured individuals including Fakhuus Hashim, #ArewaMeToo founder; Ogor Ben-Iweagwu, a public hospital doctor; Anna Usman, a mother and entrepreneur; and Providence Anaro, a teenage freshman at the University of Abuja.
She also added that a campaign petition page http://www.regulate.tobaccofree.ng was created while the campaign was present on Twitter, Facebook and Instagram via @Tobaccofreeng.”