afpthomas samson a man smokes a cigarette on september 25, 2014 in paris, holding a sample of plain cigarette packet with a prominent health warningten years since setting a trend with its workplace smoking ban, ireland is pushing ahead to be the first eu state with plain packaging for cigarettes despite fierce opposition from tobacco companies.as part of dublin&39s plan to make ireland a smokefree society by 2025 meaning a prevalence rate of under five percent lawmakers will vote to introduce plain packaging in the new year.under the draft legislation before parliament, all forms of branding, including logos and colours, would be banned and all products would have a uniform packaging with graphic health warnings."the cigarette box is the last form of advertising that the industry has," james reilly, ireland&39s minister for children who is spearheading the drive, told afp."children are influenced by advertising. i believe this will prevent many children from taking up cigarette smoking."in march 2004, ireland became the first country in the world to adopt a total workplace smoking ban.a decade on, ireland is at the forefront for europe, following australia&39s introduction of similar plain packaging legislation in 2012.canberra&39s move was met with fierce opposition by tobacco companies and other nations, particularly tobaccoproducing economies.five world trade organisation members have initiated dispute proceedings against australia&39s measures at the wto, arguing the laws are an illegal restriction on trade. &39no evidence&39 as was the case in australia, the tobacco companies are fighting dublin&39s plans."no evidence has emerged from australia, where plain packaging has been in place for almost two years, showing that plain packaging has changed the rate of decline in smoking or has had any actual positive behavioural impact at all," japan tobacco international&39s general manager in ireland, igor dzaja, told afp in an email interview.the tobacco companies say no concrete evidence exists to show the australian ban was responsible for a reduction in smoking rates, despite canberra stating daily smoking rates are down from 15.1 percent to 12.8 percent in three years.pat doorley, head of the royal college of physicians of ireland policy group on tobacco, said 50 studies show the measure will work."the thrust of all these studies is that people prefer packages with the logos and the embossing and the colours to the plain packs," he told afp."the kids think they&39re cooler. the other thing is people are less likely to take notice of health warnings on coloured packets."dublin is also looking to ban smoking in cars with children and to continue increasing the price of tobacco.in last month&39s budget, 0.40 cents was added to the price of 20 cigarettes, bringing the cost to 10 euros for the first time.tobacco companies argue that plain packaging infringes their intellectual property rights.philip morris international said imposing an "arbitrary ban on trademarks ignores the hard data showing that &39plain packaging&39 is misguided and unjustifiable".jti agreed, stating "plain packaging would leave jti unable to exploit its intellectual property rights commercially, making them, for all practical purposes, valueless in ireland." 700,000 deaths a year but reilly is adamant dublin will proceed with the plans, despite the opposition and possible legal challenges ahead."i think it&39s testimony to the fact that it&39s going to work given the tobacco industry&39s very strong reaction to this."across europe 700,000 die every year from tobaccorelated illnesses."reilly said ireland could hit its smokefree target despite a current prevalence rate of 21.5 according to ireland&39s health service."absolutely. one should always aim as high as one can."this is one of but a whole raft of different measures that we have taken to protect public health from this killer product."