Times of Suriname

H&M stores in South Africa trashed by protesters after ‘racist’ ad

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SOUTH AFRICA - South African police have cleared protesters who were trashing outlets of Swedish clothing giant H&M in Johannesbu­rg over a controvers­ial advertisem­ent of a black child. A photo on the company’s online website of a black boy wearing a green hoodie with the inscriptio­n “coolest monkey in the jungle” had triggered outrage on social media and among observers worldwide.

The company has pulled the photograph but the Economic Freedom Fighters (EFF) – a radical group set up by the expelled head of the youth wing of the ruling African National Congress – organised protests at several H&M outlets in and around Johannesbu­rg. There were also protests outside a store in Cape Town.

Video footage showed activists trashing displays, kicking over and pulling down clothes rails and pushing over mannequins.

“Several incidents of protests at H&M stores around the province have been reported,” South African police said in a tweet.

“At the East Rand mall the protesters managed to enter the shop & stole several items. SAPS members had to intervene and dispersed the group of protesters by firing rubber bullets.”

Floyd Shivambu from EFF said: “That @hm nonsense of a clothing store is now facing consequenc­es for its racism. All rational people should agree that the store should not be allowed to continue operating in South Africa.”

H&M South Africa did not respond to a request for comment, but its local website carried an apology for the advertisem­ent. “Our position is simple, we have got this wrong and we are deeply sorry,” the apology read.

H&M is not the only major company to be hit by an advertisem­ent scandal in recent years. Spanish clothing brand Zara in 2014 removed striped pyjamas with a yellow star after facing outrage over its resemblanc­e to clothes worn by Jewish prisoners in concentrat­ion camps.

And in October last year, personal care brand Dove apologised after it was accused of racism for airing a commercial showing a black woman turning into a white woman after removing her top.

(The Guardian)

 ??  ?? Protesters in front of an H&M store in Cape Town. (REUTERS)
Protesters in front of an H&M store in Cape Town. (REUTERS)

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