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H&M yanks t-shirt tribute to ‘Robin Hood’ mayor

A clothes designer owned by Swedish chain H&M pulled from stores a t-shirt paying homage to a radical Spanish politician who backed Robin Hood-style looting of supermarkets, the company said Monday.

H&M yanks t-shirt tribute to 'Robin Hood' mayor

The Weekday brand owned by H&M, a popular high street budget fashion store, had released a small line of t-shirts bearing the slogan “Food to the Poor. No world hunger,” followed by the politician’s name: Juan Manuel Sanchez Gordillo.

Sanchez, mayor of the village of Marinaleda in Andalucia, has become a controversial cult figure after he endorsed the looting of two supermarkets last month by activists who gave out the food to the needy.

The shirt, part of a line of topical designs by Weekday, sparked controversy despite being for sale in relatively small numbers, and prompted the company to apologize.

Spanish media saw irony in a global brand championing Sanchez, whose protests have challenged big businesses.

“With regard to the t-shirt that alludes to the mayor of Marinaleda, Juan Manuel Sanchez Gordillo, the Weekday brand has decided to withdraw any samples that may still be on sale,” H&M Spain said in a statement on Monday.

“It was never Weekday’s intention to take a position” on Sanchez’s politics, the statement added.

“It is sorry if any of its clients was offended by the design.”

AFP/The Local

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BUSINESS

Swedish retailer H&M sees profits slump after Russia exit

Swedish fashion retailer H&M reportedĀ a sizeable drop in third-quarter profit on Thursday following its decision to leave the Russian market.

Swedish retailer H&M sees profits slump after Russia exit

The world’s number two clothing group is among a slew of Western companies that have exited Russia following Moscow’s invasion of Ukraine.

H&M paused all sales in the country in March and announced in July that it would wind down operations, although it would reopen stores for “a limited period of time” to offload its remaining inventory.

The company said Thursday its net profit fell to 531 million kronor ($47 million) in the third quarter, down 89 percent from the same period last year. “The third quarter has largely been impacted by our decision to pause sales and then wind down the business in Russia,” chief executive Helena Helmersson said in a statement.

The group said in its earnings statement that it would launch cost-cutting measures that would result in savings totalling two billion kronor.

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