Home :: Freelance Home :: L'Oréal Found Guilty Of Racism In F...
Search
Fashion 
View More Content by: BWP NewsWire L'Oréal Found Guilty Of Racism In France

By: BWP NewsWire
June 28, 2009

 
Talk About ItNo Forum

Last year's L'Oréal executives were also accused of lightening singer Beyoncé Knowles's skin for an advertising campaign

London's Times Online is reporting that French cosmetics giant L'Oréal was found guilty this week of racial discrimination after the highest court in France heard that executives had sought an all-white team of sales staff to promote its shampoos.

La Cour de Cassation was told that Garnier, L'Oréal's beauty products division, tried to keep black, Asian and Arab women from selling its Fructis shampoo in French supermarkets.

Adecco, the temporary recruitment agency whose Districom division hired the hostesses, was also found guilty of racial discrimination.

L'Oréal expressed "disappointment" over the judgment, which ends three years of legal wrangling over the discrimination claims.

Samuel Thomas, the vice-chairman of SOS Racisme, the anti-racist campaign group, described the ruling as a "very great victory". The court was told that a Disticom executive had sent a fax in 2000 saying that Garnier's hostesses should be aged 18 to 22, wear size 38 to 42 clothes and be "BBR". This stands for "bleu, blanc, rouge" (blue, white, red) — the colors of the French flag — and is a well-known code for white people, La Cour de Cassation was told.

Prosecutors said that Garnier wanted to exclude members of the ethnic minorities on the grounds that they would be less likely to win custom for its shampoo in French stores. The court was told that only 4.65 per cent of the hostesses hired for Garnier's campaign were black, Asian or Arab.

Thérèse Coulange, the deputy managing director of Districom, who sent the fax, said that she had merely wanted hostesses able to "express themselves correctly in French".

The Paris Appeal Court had fined L'Oréal and Adecco €30,000 each and ordered them to pay a further €30,000 each in damages to SOS Racisme.

La Cour de Cassation upheld the fines but told the appeal court judges to reconsider the damages.



More Fashion
Miss Haiti is Just What Devastated Country Needs
Essence Celebrates 40 Fierce and Fab Ladies in Sept.
Janet Jackson is Greedy … So Says Pam Anderson
Kelis Vs. PETA (Round 2)
Miss America: A Lesbian Will Be Crowned
The Nude-ness of Joy Bryant and Kim K.
Designer Korto Momolu Hooks Up With Dillard’s
Naomi Campbell: ‘I’m Pleased the Driver Has Apologized’
No charges for Naomi Campbell in Driver Incident
7th Black Woman to Win the Coveted ‘Miss America’ Title

HEADLINES
Ohio restricting Puerto Rican birth certificates
Noted anti-global-warming scientist reverses course
Obama: US combat in Iraq over, 'time to turn page'
Obama adviser warns against tax cuts for wealthy
Calif. doctor gets stuck in chimney, dies
Gates with Iraq troops as combat mission ends
Guard troops to deploy to Arizona border on Monday
Suspect in five Arizona killings apparently kills self
After Washington rally, Beck assails Obama's religion
7 US troops killed in latest Afghanistan fighting

Our Partner:BWP NewsWire

Orlando, FL, 32811

Freelance Sections
Business Community Crime
Economy Editorial Education
Election Entertainment Fashion
GlenEvilBeck Haiti Health
History Interviews Jackson
MovieReview NewsFeed Newsletter
Obama Obituaries Political
PressRelease Relationships Religion
SiteReview Sports Technology
Travel Video
Avonte Wright II Tiara Harris II Tiara Harris I Shakara Set II Beyonce Knowles II
Avonte Wright I Shakara Set I Beyonce Knowles Halle Berry II Halle Berry I