By Pei Li
HONG KONG (Reuters) – U.S. exercise apparel brand Lululemon
The hashtag “Lululemon insults China” was viewed 204 million times on China’s Weibo platform by Tuesday afternoon, with some commentators demanding a boycott of the brand.
The furore started on Sunday, with an Instagram link posted by the Lululemon official, Trevor Fleming, that promoted the sale of a T-shirt on the website of California artist Jess Sluder, under the name “bat fried rice”.
The long-sleeved T-shirt, bearing an image of a pair of chopsticks with bat wings on the front and a Chinese takeout box with bat wings on the back, riled critics who said the two were trying to stir anti-Asian sentiment during the coronavirus pandemic.
“We acted immediately, and the person involved is no longer an employee of Lululemon,” the firm said in an Instagram response to a customer on Tuesday, without identifying the individual.
It called the image and the post inappropriate and inexcusable, and apologised that one of its employees had been affiliated with promoting the offensive T-shirt.
Fleming did not immediately respond to requests from Reuters to seek comment. On his LinkedIn account, he said he worked at Lululemon up to April 2020.
Sluder did not immediately respond to Reuters’ requests for comment.
Reports of racially charged assaults on Asians have grown since the pandemic first emerged in a market selling wildlife in China late last year, before spreading worldwide to infect 2.4 million people, with more than 169,000 deaths.
Early studies said the virus could have come from bats.
Before it was removed on Sunday, the post on Sluder’s Instagram account read, “Where did COVID-19 come from? Nothing is certain, but we know a bat was involved.”
It added, “Beginning today, my limited edition #quarantees are now available. Link in bio or DM for details…Thank you for your support and sense of humor! #humornothat #batfriedrice”.
However, in the following days, Instagram users left more than a thousand comments on Luluemon’s official account, accusing it of xenophobia.
China blocks Instagram within the country with what is known as its Great Firewall.
A separate statement posted on Lululemon’s official Weibo account on Tuesday did not apologise, but said the design was not a Lululemon product and the firm opposed “any discriminatory behaviours”.
It was not the first time Lululemon has faced criticism of being insensitive. In 2013, Chip Wilson, the founder of the cult yoga clothier, apologised for remarks suggesting that some women’s bodies “don’t work” in the brand’s pants.
(Interactive graphic tracking global spread of coronavirus: open https://tmsnrt.rs/3aIRuz7 in an external browser. )
(Reporting by Pei Li; Editing by Clarence Fernandez)