<p>Mexico on Tuesday banned sales of electronic cigarettes and other vaping devices because of concerns about their health effects, the government announced.</p>.<p>President Andres Manuel Lopez Obrador said it was a "lie" to claim that e-cigarettes are a safe alternative to inhaling tobacco smoke.</p>.<p>"The vapors are also harmful for health," Lopez Obrador told reporters as he announced the signing of a presidential decree introducing the ban on World No Tobacco Day.</p>.<p>He showed a pink vaping device to illustrate how the products are intended to appeal to young people.</p>.<p>"Look at the color, the design," Lopez Obrador said.</p>.<p>Mexico prohibited the import and export of vaping devices and cartridges in October, but the companies have continued to sell their inventory, Deputy Health Minister Hugo Lopez-Gatell said.</p>.<p>The new ban covers "the circulation and marketing of these new products," he added.</p>.<p>E-cigarettes heat up a cartridge of liquid typically containing nicotine and other chemicals into an aerosol. The user inhales the resulting vapor, mimicking traditional cigarettes.</p>.<p>Proponents of vaping say it is safer than traditional tobacco.</p>.<p>The World Health Organization considers electronic cigarettes to be harmful to health and has called for tight regulation to stop young people in particular from using them.</p>.<p>More than 30 countries have banned sales of electronic cigarettes, the WHO said last July.</p>.<p>In April, e-cigarette firm Juul agreed to pay $22.5 million in a US lawsuit that alleged the company deliberately targeted teenagers and lied about how addictive its products are.</p>
<p>Mexico on Tuesday banned sales of electronic cigarettes and other vaping devices because of concerns about their health effects, the government announced.</p>.<p>President Andres Manuel Lopez Obrador said it was a "lie" to claim that e-cigarettes are a safe alternative to inhaling tobacco smoke.</p>.<p>"The vapors are also harmful for health," Lopez Obrador told reporters as he announced the signing of a presidential decree introducing the ban on World No Tobacco Day.</p>.<p>He showed a pink vaping device to illustrate how the products are intended to appeal to young people.</p>.<p>"Look at the color, the design," Lopez Obrador said.</p>.<p>Mexico prohibited the import and export of vaping devices and cartridges in October, but the companies have continued to sell their inventory, Deputy Health Minister Hugo Lopez-Gatell said.</p>.<p>The new ban covers "the circulation and marketing of these new products," he added.</p>.<p>E-cigarettes heat up a cartridge of liquid typically containing nicotine and other chemicals into an aerosol. The user inhales the resulting vapor, mimicking traditional cigarettes.</p>.<p>Proponents of vaping say it is safer than traditional tobacco.</p>.<p>The World Health Organization considers electronic cigarettes to be harmful to health and has called for tight regulation to stop young people in particular from using them.</p>.<p>More than 30 countries have banned sales of electronic cigarettes, the WHO said last July.</p>.<p>In April, e-cigarette firm Juul agreed to pay $22.5 million in a US lawsuit that alleged the company deliberately targeted teenagers and lied about how addictive its products are.</p>