LONDON (Reuters) - A council has become the first in London to rule that smokers will no longer be able to foster children.

A smoker lights up a cigarette in a public place near the Stade de Geneve in Geneva August 22, 2007. REUTERS/Denis Balibouse

Redbridge Council’s cabinet agreed Tuesday night to a ban on placing children with foster carers who smoke unless there are exceptional circumstances.

The local authority in northeast London said the decision, which will come into force in 2010, was made to protect children from the “damaging effects of passive and second-hand smoke.”

Other councils around the country have introduced similar measures, particularly relating to very young children, but Redbridge’s ban is thought to be the most far-reaching.

“We know this is a difficult issue because some people will feel it is an intrusion on personal freedoms,” said Councilor Michael Stark.

“But we also know that smoking increases the risk of serious illness in childhood. On balance, we have decided children in our care shouldn’t grow up breathing second-hand smoke.”

The council cited scientific evidence that showed passive smoking caused lung cancer and childhood respiratory disease.

Existing smokers will be told of the new policy and given help to quit.

The Fostering Network, a charity which represents groups involved in fostering, said it believed no child under five should be placed with carers who smoked.

However the charity, which estimates there is a shortfall of some 10,000 carers, said it did not want potentially good foster parents to be put off because they had an occasional cigarette.

Tobacco lobby groups said the move was part of an “ongoing campaign to stigmatize smokers.”

“It’s going to exclude people who could be outstanding foster parents,” said a spokesman for pro-smoking group Forest.

“It sends out an insidious message that smokers in general are unfit parents and I don’t think any politician has the right to do that.”