TAIPEI ā Bulgari has become the latest international brand to apologize to China after listing Taiwan as a country on its website.
China claims self-ruled Taiwan as its territory, and both the government and Chinese internet users have a history of scolding or boycotting international brands that have referred to Taiwan as a separate country. Late Tuesday, Bulgari posted an apology on Weibo, Chinaās version of Twitter, saying it āsteadfastly and alwaysā respected Chinaās sovereignty and territorial integrity.
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āOur brand has immediately corrected the mistakenly marked store addresses and map indications on the overseas official website, which resulted from management negligence,ā the Italian luxury brand said in a statement. āWe deeply apologize for the mistake.ā
Brands also have come under fire for offending Beijingās other geopolitical sensibilities, including its territorial claims in the South China Sea and the status of the Dalai Lama, the exiled Tibetan leader.
The Bulgari incident was widely discussed on Chinese social media, with some users demanding that the brand distribute its apology on its international social media accounts as well.
āDid you post it on the overseas Internet?ā one comment with more than 40,000 likes read. āDonāt be a two-faced person who only wants Chinese people to see (the apology).ā
A Weibo topic asking users if they accepted Bulgariās apology had been viewed more than 12 million times by Wednesday afternoon.
Several Chinese state-run publications joined in the demand that Bulgari apologize on its international platforms as well.
āBulgari made a mistake on its overseas official website but only issued an apology on its mainland China account,ā read a commentary by China Daily. āSuch an apology may hardly convince Chinese consumers.ā
Brands including Valentino, Calvin Klein, Coach, Zara and Delta Airlines have apologized in recent years for listing Taiwan as a country or region separate from China on their websites.
Mercedes-Benz in 2018 apologized for quoting the Dalai Lama on Instagram, while Gap the same year apologized for selling a T-shirt with a map of China that omitted Taiwan and the South China Sea.