German camera maker Leica has become the latest company to draw fire over an advertisement deemed offensive in China, distancing itself from a short film that broaches the taboo subject of the 1989 Tiananmen Square Massacre.
A short promotional film released this week depicts Leica-wielding photojournalists at work in danger zones around the world, focusing on one Western shooter’s struggle to get in place for the famed “tank man” photograph.
That picture, of an ordinary citizen facing down a Chinese army tank, is the most iconic image from the weeks-long pro-democracy protests that paralyzed Beijing in 1989.
Photo: Reuters
The demonstrations were violently suppressed by armed forces, with hundreds and perhaps thousands believed killed.
The subject has been essentially banned from public discourse in China and is particularly sensitive as the 30th anniversary of the crackdown approaches in early June.
The video ends with an image of Leica’s logo and the statement: “This film is dedicated to those who lend their eyes to make us see.”
The film sparked angry comments from Chinese netizens.
A company spokeswoman told Hong Kong’s South China Morning Post that the video, produced by Brazilian agency F/Nazca Saatchi Saatchi, was not officially sanctioned by Leica.
Leica “must therefore distance itself from the content shown in the video and regrets any misunderstandings or false conclusions that may have been drawn,” the newspaper quoted spokeswoman Emily Anderson as saying.
Searches of Chinese social media yesterday for the film or discussion of it failed to return any results, suggesting that China’s massive censorship machine was blocking the video and any comments about it.
The camera maker joins a growing list of foreign companies to learn the hard way about the political sensitivities that go with operating in China’s gigantic market.
Last year, Mercedes-Benz apologized for “hurting the feelings” of China’s people after its Instagram account used a quote by the Dalai Lama, the exiled Tibetan spiritual leader who is vilified by Beijing as a separatist.
Italian fashion house Dolce & Gabbana also issued a mea culpa after its products were pulled from lucrative Chinese e-commerce platforms over an Instagram post seen in China as culturally offensive.
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