South Africa Retailers Pull Out TRESemmé Hair Products Over Racist Online Advert

TRESemmé hair products are being pulled out of retailer shelves in South Africa after denigrating black hair in an online advert they released just recently. The advert, produced specifically for pharmacy chain Clicks, featured photos of African type hair that were labelled as "dry and damaged" and "frizzy and dull" while Caucasian type hair was labelled as "normal" and "fine and flat." Protests have since bombarded the brand with critics calling out the advert as insensitive due to historic issues attached to African hair.

According to the BBC, big name retailers such as Shoprite, Woolworths and Pick N Pay have since discarded TRESemmé products from their shelves. Following the backlash, several employees at Clicks have been suspended while their senior executive had also just resigned.

A number of Clicks stores were compelled to close shop on Monday after protests led by the Economic Freedom Fighters party alleged racism and called the hair advertisement "dehumanising." Protesters became violent leaving one shop with minor damages from being firebombed.

In a statement released by EFF, "The implications of this are that black identity exists as inferior to the identity of white people. It is an assertion that white standards of beauty are to be aspired to and features of black represent damage, decay and abnormality," they said.

TRESemmé has apologised and acknowledged that the advert promoted racist stereotypes about hair.

"The campaign set out to celebrate the beauty of all hair types and the range of solutions that TRESemmé offers, but we got it wrong."

A meeting followed suit between the opposition party EFF, Clicks and Unilever - TRESemmé's parent company. Reports said that Unilever would see the removal of all TRESemmé products from South African stores for an agreed period of 10 days. They also said that a donation of 10,0000 sanitary pads will be given to informal settlers around the country.

However, Unilever has not publicly commented on this agreement.

Vikesh Ramsunder, Clicks chief executive earlier apologised while assuring that an audit of all promotional material would be "urgently implemented." He also said that the company will require staff to undergo diversity and inclusivity training.

"Whilst the images and content were provided to us by our supplier TRESemmé, this does not absolve us from blame," he said.

RECENT NEWS

Airwallex Plots Silicon Valley Expansion

Payments group opens San Francisco base and trims Tencent stake as it courts US investorsAirwallex has set out plans to ... Read more

Coca-Cola Last Ditch Attempt To Offload Costa

Price dispute threatens collapse of deal with preferred bidder TDR CapitalCoca-Cola is holding eleventh-hour talks with ... Read more

Is It A Bubble?

I have lived through several financial bubbles and read closely about many others. One might expect that the damage infl... Read more

OpenAI Faces Renewed Competitive Pressure

OpenAI is entering a more demanding phase of the consumer AI race after Sam Altman issued a call for staff to concentrat... Read more

META Prepares Sharp Cut To Metaverse Spending

Meta is preparing to scale back its metaverse ambitions as Mark Zuckerberg accelerates a strategic shift towards artific... Read more

BoE Loosens Capital Rules

The Bank of England has taken a significant step towards easing post-crisis regulation by lowering its estimate of the c... Read more