The Borneo Post

Shell removes woman cutouts over groping pictures online

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KUALA LUMPUR: Energy giant Shell said it is removing life-sized cutouts of a woman in a headscarf from its petrol stations after photos of men groping the figure started circulatin­g online.

The adverts featuring a female employee, wearing a red T- shirt with a Shell logo, black trousers and a black headscarf, smiling and with her thumb raised in the air, had been placed at Royal Dutch Shell's stations in Malaysia.

But images of men kissing the cardboard cutouts, holding her hand and grabbing her chest and crotch started circulatin­g on Facebook in recent days, in what Shell blasted as ‘distastefu­l and suggestive acts'.

The woman, named in local reports as 25-year- old Nor Shafila Khairusall­eh, who worked at a Shell station, criticised the ‘extreme behaviour' of the men in the images.

“They may just be joking, but I feel humiliated because that is still myself although it is just an image,” she told news portal mStar.

The Anglo- Dutch group said in a statement that “we do not condone this disrespect­ful act, which is completely against the culture of Malaysians and Shell's core values. We urge netizens and members of the public to refrain from sharing these images further.

“The standee (cutout) will be removed from all our sites with immediate effect.”

An AFP journalist at a Shell station in Bentong, just outside the capital Kuala Lumpur, said two of the cutouts had been removed from the forecourt and placed inside the site's shop.

A staff member said the cutouts were removed Monday and were going to be placed in storage.

Shell did not say how many cutouts were removed and which stations were affected. The oil giant has a network of over 950 stations across Malaysia and serves nearly one million customers a day, according to its website. — AFP

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