Tobacco giant Philip Morris told a secret Senate hearing that soaring trade in illegal cigarettes would wipe out legal products in Australia as soon as 2030, claiming executives’ identities should be kept secret because of threats from organised crime. Labor criticised Coalition MPs for allowing the company to give evidence to an inquiry on illegal tobacco in a closed-door session in Canberra on Monday, ending more than 15 years of precedent under a World Health Organization (WHO) agreement. Australia is a signatory to the WHO framework convention on tobacco control, which is designed to stop interference in public health policy from cigarette manufacturers. It calls for transparency around evidence from tobacco companies when required in decision-making.…