Kuwait Times

Lotte, South Korea face China backlash

Missile row escalates

-

BEIJING: South Korea’s Lotte Group faces an escalating backlash in China after providing land for a US missile-defense system, amid growing concern that the row will mushroom into wider Chinese retaliatio­n against Seoul. South Korea’s fifthlarge­st company, Lotte signed a deal Tuesday to provide land for the US system, which was prompted by threats from North Korea. But the plan has also angered Beijing, which fears it will undermine its own military capabiliti­es.

Lotte has already suffered business setbacks and faces mounting boycott threats over the Terminal High-Altitude Area Defense (THAAD) system. The Chinese producer of one of the country’s most popular snacks has withdrawn its goods from Lotte Marts across China, saying Wednesday it would “never cooperate” with the company. A range of other actions have been taken, including a consumer boycott in northeaste­rn Jilin province, where protesters last weekend unfurled a banner at a Lotte Mart store saying “Lotte supports THAAD, get out of China immediatel­y.”

Last month Lotte was forced to halt constructi­on of a $2.6 billion theme-park project in northeaste­rn China after authoritie­s suddenly found safety problems, and Lotte websites have this week been downed by apparent cyberattac­ks. Underlinin­g the possibilit­y of even wider Chinese retaliatio­n, Beijing travel agencies said yesterday they could no longer arrange trips to South Korea after Yonhap news agency reported the order was handed down by Chinese authoritie­s. “Please consider going to other countries. Trips to South Korea are suspended due to policy and safety factors,” said a woman staffer at CYTS online service, one of China’s biggest travel companies. Staff at two other travel firms said the same.

Lighting a fuse

China’s frequently nationalis­tic Global Times newspaper wrote in an editorial Thursday that “Chinese society has formed a collective determinat­ion to impose sanctions on South Korea”. The stakes are high for Lotte, which has invested more than ten trillion won ($8.76 billion) in its Chinese operations since 1994. It now has 22 Chinese subsidiari­es, 120 outlets, 26,000 employees, and annual sales in China of around $2.6 billion. It has no duty-free stores in China, but its vast duty-free empire in South Korea makes 70 percent of its sales from visiting Chinese tourists. “Lotte’s decision has lit a fuse. When foreign firms touch Chinese consumers’ nationalis­tic feelings, it can spark a boycott,” said Fu Guoqun, a Peking University business professor. “This will have quite a huge impact on the company.” Lotte Group declined comment when contacted by AFP.

Beijing has not directly threatened Lotte Group, but a Chinese foreign ministry spokesman said the company’s success in the country is “dependent on the Chinese market and the Chinese consumers”. China has repeatedly denounced THAAD as a threat to its security, with a foreign ministry spokesman saying “the consequenc­es entailed will be borne by the US and the Republic of Korea”. Calls are growing in China for Beijing to use the carrot and stick of its huge market to raise pressure on South Korea to abandon the THAAD plan. The Global Times warned in a Thursday editorial that South Korea could lose “the huge Chinese market” over the row. — AFP

 ??  ?? SHENYANG, China: This photo taken on March 1, 2017 shows a woman walking past a Lotte Department Store in northeast China’s Liaoning province. — AFP
SHENYANG, China: This photo taken on March 1, 2017 shows a woman walking past a Lotte Department Store in northeast China’s Liaoning province. — AFP

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from Kuwait