Swedish apparel brand H&M has been strongly boycotted by mainland folk for refusing to buy cotton from Xinjiang, and now mainland netizens are turning their focus to other brands that have issued similar statements, including NIKE and Adidas (Adidas) on the 24th and 25th, respectively, on the first Weibo hot search, becoming the latest object to be threatened with boycott.
In fact, in the past two years, there have been many brands that have issued statements related to refusing to buy cotton from Xinjiang, including NIKE, Adidas, NEW balance, etc. But after H&M’s statement was unearthed on the 24th, mainland netizens really launched a massive boycott, and NIKE and Adidas even shot up to the top of the Weibo hot search list.
NIKE (translated by Lu: Nike) was also the first hot search item for a while. (Photo: flipped from Weibo)
The company’s first-ever “NIKE” was the first to be searched on Weibo due to the Xinjiang cotton incident. The company’s main business is to promote the development of the company.
The company’s main business is to promote the development of the company’s products and services. “Wasted years of support for you, too disappointed.” “To earn China’s money, but also to smash China’s pot, shameless!”
In addition, the brands that have issued a statement refusing to buy Xinjiang cotton, most of them are members of the international non-profit organization “Good Cotton Development Institute” (BCI, The Better Cotton Initiative), will issue a related statement, also because the BCI decided to suspend the issuance of BIC in Xinjiang cotton license.
It is understood that the BIC members have more than 200 brands, the list has been dug out, many mainland netizens are searching for the relevant brands in accordance with the list had issued a statement, intends to list a “boycott full list”, including IKEA, PUMA, TOMMY HILFIGER, Walmart (Walmart The list includes IKEA, PUMA, TOMMY HILFIGER, Walmart (Walmart), etc., which have now been locked and are likely to become the next wave of boycott targets.
▼ Mainland netizens dig up a list of BCI members to find boycott targets. (Photo/revised from Weibo)
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