A senate inquiry into Australia's illegal tobacco crisis will hold its first hearing on Monday, and is set to hear from Australian Border Force officials, medical experts and representatives from the Cancer Council.
Ahead of the hearing, health advocates say they will deliver a clear message to MPs that any solution that does not reduce smoking rates and deaths is a failure.
The body bags will represent the 66 Australians who die every day from tobacco.
While tobacco lobbyists have called for the excise to be lowered to disrupt illegal traders, Australian Council on Smoking and Health chief executive Laura Hunter said this proposal was a "self-serving red herring".
"If you're comfortable making all cigarettes cheaper, you're comfortable with more people dying from smoking," Ms Hunter said.
"You don't tackle a public health crisis by engaging in a race to the bottom with criminals, making Australia's deadliest product cheaper and more accessible.
"When cigarettes are cheaper, more people take them up, people already addicted smoke more and fewer people quit."
Instead, the council is advocating for stronger legislation and enforcement mechanisms to make it harder for illegal tobacco products to be sold.
"There are over 40,000 outlets selling tobacco in Australia, far more than essential services like supermarkets, petrol stations, and pharmacies," Ms Hunter said.
"When cigarettes are this widely available, it normalises them and makes enforcement much more challenging."
Smoking is known to cause at least 16 types of cancer including cancer of the lung, mouth, liver, bladder, bowel, kidney and other organs.
"Australia's world-leading tobacco control measures, including plain packaging, tobacco excise and advertising bans have seen the number of Australians who smoke cut by more than half since 2001," Cancer Council Australia chief executive Jacinta Reddan said.
"Cancer Council Australia is calling for stronger licensing and enforcement and for governments to work together to tackle illicit tobacco."