Merchant of Death Steps Down: A Look at the Deadly Work of Philip Morris International's Outgoing CEO Louis Camilleri
13 May 2013
This week, when tobacco giant Philip Morris International hosts its annual shareholders’ meeting in New York, the company will honor outgoing CEO Louis Camilleri for his years of service. But a look back at Camilleri’s tenure shows a trail of death and destruction unworthy of celebration.
In 2008, parent company Altria Group spun off the international division of Philip Morris to focus more on “emerging markets,” the euphemism corporations use to describe the exploitation of Global South nations. For decades, as the regulatory environment and public sentiment has turned against smoking in the U.S., tobacco corporations have set their sights overseas. As a result, Philip Morris International now derives more revenue from Asia than from the European Union, and nearly 80 percent of tobacco-related deaths occur in the Global South.
While the Marlboro man has been retired in the United States, he is alive and well as a marketing icon in several countries around the world. Sales of Philip Morris International’s brands grew in other nations last year, with shipments of 927 billion cigarettes and revenue of more than $31 billion -- an accomplishment for which the CEO is well compensated. Also in 2012, Camilleri received an astonishing $24.7 million, up 23 percent from the previous year.
Second in size only to state-controlled China National Tobacco Corp., Philip Morris International is the biggest bully of the tobacco industry globally. On Camilleri’s watch, the corporation has engaged in numerous aggressive marketing tactics and legal maneuvers to ensure increased sales in nations that are trying to stem the rising tide of smoking deaths. Here are just a few recent examples:
On this page on the Philip Morris International website, the company makes clear that it has little patience for such inconveniences as the World Health Organization’s global tobacco treaty, adopted in 2003. Formally known as the Framework Convention on Tobacco Control, the treaty specifically prevents industry interference in public health policy, thanks to the active work of civil society, such as organizations like Corporate Accountability International. All of the above challenged policies are included in the treaty, which has been ratified by 175 countries and prohibits advertising, promotion and sponsorship. As a result, more than 60 percent of countries have some form of ad ban already in place. But that’s just a nuisance to Philip Morris International.
Calling such policies as point-of-sale display bans and plain packaging “extreme,” the company invokes familiar rhetoric about “communication with adult smokers” and whines about bans on charitable contributions, “use of journalistic expression or political commentary” and “restrictions on the rights of the tobacco industry to participate in the democratic process.” This is rich coming from a company whose modus operandi is to upend the democratic process in every nation it does business with.
But it’s also no surprise given Philip Morris International’s leadership. Hardly a class act, CEO Louis Camilleri remarked at the 2011 shareholder’s meeting that it wasn’t really “that hard to quit” smoking. Also, in this Michael Moore style 20/20 segment on ABC, Camilleri attempted to dodge hard questions about why his company was targeting children in Indonesia. (Included is the infamous and startling video of the “smoking baby.”)
Will Philip Morris International change its destructive ways with Camilleri stepping down as CEO? (He remains as board chair.) During his tenure, nearly 30 million people died from tobacco-related causes globally. When will the tobacco industry’s largest player stop obstructing public policy in nations that are trying to save lives and reduce suffering among their citizens? With this change in leadership, Philip Morris International has the opportunity to stop being the world’s bully.