Business Day

Dior apologises for ‘inappropri­ate’ action after leaving Taiwan off a map of China

Citizens become more vocal in support of sovereignt­y over its territorie­s

- Jinshan Hong Hong Kong

Christian Dior became the latest company to face a backlash in China over political sensitivit­ies, after making a presentati­on at a university that included a map of the country without Taiwan.

The French luxury brand apologised on Weibo on Thursday after a video clip circulated online showing a human resources worker at a campus recruiting event questioned by a student on why Taiwan was not included on the map.

Western organisati­ons, from the US National Basketball Associatio­n (NBA) to fashion retailers Givenchy and Dolce & Gabbana, are increasing­ly coming under fire for perceived slights to Beijing’s One China policy. Citizens are becoming more vocal in support of China’s sovereignt­y over its territorie­s as the government confronts pro-democracy protesters in Hong Kong and a trade war with the US.

At Dior’s campus presentati­on, the student’s question about Taiwan was met with applause from the audience.

The Dior worker answered that Taiwan is too small to be visible on the map, but the student noted that it is not smaller than the island of Hainan, which was visible. The audience burst into applause again.

The worker then said she managed only mainland China for Dior, while Taiwan and Hong Kong are covered by others at the company.

Dior said in the Weibo statement it is “deeply sorry for the incident where the wrong descriptio­n and wrong explanatio­n were made”. It said this was inappropri­ate behaviour and the company respects the One China principle. Dior said it is investigat­ing the matter and will treat it seriously.

The incident comes a week after the NBA became engulfed in controvers­y over a tweet by the Houston Rockets’ GM supporting Hong Kong’s prodemocra­cy protesters.

The comment provoked a storm that led to the cancellati­on of sponsorshi­ps and NBA events, as well as a blackout of exhibition games by the state broadcaste­r.

Dior joins other companies including fashion Coach,

Givenchy and Versace in the nationalis­m spotlight. The three fashion brands were called out in August for T-shirt and product designs identifyin­g Hong Kong and Taiwan as separate countries from China.

Dolce & Gabbana has suffered after its 2018 advertisem­ent showing a Chinese model struggling to eat spaghetti and pizza with chopsticks sparked outrage and a boycott.

In April, Leica Camera quickly distanced itself from a promotiona­l video that depicted the 1989 Tiananmen Square pro-democracy protests.

Western companies have had to tread carefully not to draw the ire of consumers in one of their biggest markets. Chinese consumers are estimated to account for at least a third of luxury sales and two-thirds of the industry’s growth, according to consultanc­y Bain.

CHINESE CONSUMERS ARE ESTIMATED TO ACCOUNT FOR AT LEAST A THIRD OF LUXURY SALES AND TWO-THIRDS OF THE INDUSTRY’S GROWTH

 ?? /Reuters ?? Out in the cold: A Dior store in London in December 2018. The luxury goods maker apologised for the behaviour of an employee during a campus recruiting event.
/Reuters Out in the cold: A Dior store in London in December 2018. The luxury goods maker apologised for the behaviour of an employee during a campus recruiting event.

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