Korean cigarette firm pulls 'racist' monkey ads

A 'This Africa' cigarette ad with a monkey Cigarette ads featuring monkeys are to be pulled

Related Stories

South Korea's largest tobacco company has promised to change an advertising campaign after accusations of racism.

Posters promoting a new line of cigarettes featured pictures of monkeys dressed as news reporters, declaring "Africa is coming!"

The cigarettes are part of a new This Africa line. The company, KT&G, says they contain African tobacco roasted and dried in a traditional fashion.

The cigarette packets contain images of monkeys roasting tobacco.

'Mocking Africa'

"We are deeply offended by KT&G's shameless and insulting use of this mocking imagery," said the African Tobacco Control Alliance in a statement calling for the withdrawal of the ad campaign, saying it was "at a minimum culturally insensitive".

Cigarette ad featuring a monkey in South Korea Ads for This Africa cigarettes have been called racist

It added: "Mocking Africa to sell a product that causes death and disease is unacceptable, and we will not stand for the exploitation of Africa by tobacco companies."

The advertisements were displayed at convenience shops across the country.

A KT&G company spokeswoman told news agency AFP it would pull the ads this month.

She called the controversy "regrettable" and said the company wished to "dispel concerns of racism".

"We absolutely had no intention to offend anyone and only chose monkeys because they are delightful animals that remind people of Africa," she said.

"Since this product contains leaves produced by the traditional African style, we only tried to adopt images that symbolise the nature of Africa."

However, she said the cigarette packet images would remain, as the company does not consider them to be offensive.

More on This Story

Related Stories

From other news sites

More Asia stories

RSS

Features & Analysis

  • Street childrenBoldly going

    What India's space scientists and street children have in common


  • Menachem Mendel SzpiroPhotographic memory

    What my family saved from World War Two... it wasn't a Picasso


  • Poppy at the Menin Gate in Ypres, BelgiumPoppy pitch

    Belgian business waits for WW1 battlefield boom


  • Afghan soldier in KunarBattle not over

    Remote valley may be a post-2014 template for Afghan army


Elsewhere on the BBC

  • EarthLiquid assets

    How much water is on the Earth, and where exactly is it held?

Programmes

  • A 3D computer generated street created from a British Library mapClick Watch

    Why old maps have been turned into virtual 3D worlds

BBC © 2013 The BBC is not responsible for the content of external sites. Read more.

This page is best viewed in an up-to-date web browser with style sheets (CSS) enabled. While you will be able to view the content of this page in your current browser, you will not be able to get the full visual experience. Please consider upgrading your browser software or enabling style sheets (CSS) if you are able to do so.