Audio By Carbonatix
A controversial advertisement for make-up removal wipes has been pulled from the internet in China, after it prompted widespread backlash on social media over claims it "demonized" victims of sexual assault.
The advertisement, produced by Chinese cotton product brand Purcotton, shows a woman walking down a dimly lit street at night followed by a masked man.
As the man begins to approach her, the woman is shown using a Purcotton wipe to remove her make-up, seemingly horrifying her would-be attacker and causing him to run away.
Though it is unclear when the advertisement was first released, social media users in China have seized on the short video, decrying its apparent victim-blaming message, and labeling it "disgusting" and "wrong."
Some have even called for a boycott of the company's products."You use what scares women the most for an advertisement, which is beyond comprehension and unacceptable," one user said on Weibo, China's Twitter-like platform.
China Women's News, a website which is operated by the government-affiliated All-China Women's Federation, denounced the ad on their social media for "demonizing the victim."
"(It is) full of prejudice, malice, and ignorance. Women are consumers and not consumer goods. It is inevitable that 'creative' advertisements that insult women will be criticized by the public," the social media post said.
Purcotton, which is owned by Winner Medical Group, has more than 240 stores in China and an estimated 20 million customers, according to the company's website.
Purcotton originally defended the advertisement as a creative way to advertise the "cleaning function of the product," but as the calls for a boycott grew, the company removed the video from their accounts and eventually apologized on January 8.
"We have set up a team to hold people to account for the problem and, in the meantime, we will improve content production and the review process to prevent similar incidents from happening again," the company's post said.
Purcotton posted a second apology letter to their Weibo account on Monday.
It isn't the first time that a Chinese company has been forced to apologize over accusations of sexism.
In 2020, supermarket chain RT-Mart apologized after one of its stores displayed a sizing chart which labeled women who wore large or XXL clothes "rotten" and "terrible."
One year earlier, China's top ride-hailing app Didi Chuxing had to backtrack on a curfew for female passengers using its service after 8 p.m., which had been put in place following the murder of two women who used the app.
Latest Stories
-
Ho Nurses Training College mounts pressure on UHAS to release its facilities
17 minutes -
140 suspects, 27 dockets – Kwakye Ofosu says ORAL is already delivering results
27 minutes -
Cabinet approves special tribunals to tackle corruption and illicit wealth cases
47 minutes -
Ghana Immigration Service rescues 73 from abuse in an anti-fraud operation
1 hour -
EOCO freezes ¢1.5bn in assets linked to corruption investigations – Kwakye Ofosu
1 hour -
Wildlife to replace historical characters on British banknotes
2 hours -
China and North Korea to resume passenger train service after 6-year halt
2 hours -
Meghan to headline ‘girls’ weekend’ in Australia for 300 women
2 hours -
ORAL: We won’t manipulate judiciary for political ends – Gov’t spokesperson
2 hours -
Congo Republic’s Sassou set to extend long rule, focus on succession
5 hours -
At least six dead in Switzerland bus fire
5 hours -
GH¢50m frozen in Wontumi’s accounts – Gov’t spokesperson Felix Kwakye Ofosu reveals
5 hours -
Brent to trade above $95 for next two months on Iran war, EIA saysÂ
6 hours -
US nears deal to resume intelligence operations in MaliÂ
6 hours -
Al Qaeda-linked group killed at least 12 truck drivers in Mali, HRW says
6 hours
