Sowetan

EFF calls off Clicks protests

Unilever agrees to EFF demands

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Unilever, which supplies TRESemmé products in SA, and the EFF yesterday reached mutual ground on the future of the hair-care brand.

While large retailers such as Shoprite Checkers, Pick n Pay and Clicks had agreed to pull TRESemmé products from their shelves after an alleged racist advertisem­ent by the brand, Unilever and the EFF have agreed that these products can be put back on shelves in 10 days.

In a joint statement, issued after a meeting between the two, they said they had reached an agreement that Unilever will:

express its remorse to all

South Africans, black women in particular, for the racist TRESemmé SA image; and

withdraw all TRESemmé SA products from all retail stores for a period of 10 days as a demonstrat­ion of its remorse for the offensive and racist image; and Unilever will donate a minimum of 10,000 sanitary towels and sanitisers to informal settlement­s identified by the EFF.

Among the list of demands from the EFF to Unilever was that it supply the names of its employees who were behind the ad.

Unilever told the EFF it could not give in to this demand.

“We could not find each other on the publishing of the names of the people responsibl­e for the racist image,” the joint statement from the two parties said. “Moreover, the director involved in the campaign has since left the company and the country.”

The company would take action against the remaining employees.

The TRESemmé advert was published by Clicks on its website last week.

It showed four images: two of black women’s hair described as being “frizzy and dull” and “dry and damaged”, against two images of a white woman’s hair, described as “fine and flat” and then as “normal”.

The ad caused outrage with the EFF taking action against beauty and health retailer.

The company explained the ad was not its own, apologised for publishing the images and said it was an oversight on its part.

It suspended the staff who put the ad on its website.

The EFF, however, did not retreat and embarked on protest action against Clicks, calling for it to cut all ties with Unilever.

The party said the advert had racist undertones and called for those who approved it to be fired.

It disrupted operations at several Clicks stores around the country. A number of Clicks stores were damaged in the unrest.

Clicks had to obtain a court interdict to bar EFF protesters from intimidati­ng its staff and customers and from damaging its property.

It suspended operations at all its outlets on Wednesday.

The EFF has also started talks with Clicks representa­tives. TimesLIVE

 ?? /TWITTER/ @EFFSOUTHAF­RICA ?? Julius Malema, middle, and fellow EFF leaders pose for pictures with Unilever officials after reaching an agreement that TRESemmé products could remain on South African store shelves.
/TWITTER/ @EFFSOUTHAF­RICA Julius Malema, middle, and fellow EFF leaders pose for pictures with Unilever officials after reaching an agreement that TRESemmé products could remain on South African store shelves.

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