Women Erased From IKEA's Saudi Catalog; Company Apologizes
Mark Memmott
Tuesday, October 2, 2012 at 8:36 AM
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Now you see her (in IKEA's catalog for the U.S.).

Now you see her (in IKEA's catalog for the U.S.).

IKEA


Compare the U.S. and Saudi catalogs. All the same stuff is for sale. But you won't find women in one.

Now you don't. (The Saudi version.)

Now you don't. (The Saudi version.)

IKEA

Now you see her. (U.S. catalog.)

Now you see her. (U.S. catalog.)

IKEA

Now you don't. (Saudi catalog.)

Now you don't. (Saudi catalog.)

IKEA

Now you see them. (U.S. catalog.)

Now you see them. (U.S. catalog.)

IKEA

Now you don't. (Saudi catalog.)

Now you don't. (Saudi catalog.)

IKEA

She's gone: One example of how women disappeared from IKEA's catalog. In the U.S. version, she's standing at a sink. In the Saudi version, she's missing.

She's gone: One example of how women disappeared from IKEA's catalog. In the U.S. version, she's standing at a sink. In the Saudi version, she's missing.

IKEA

Click through Swedish furniture giant IKEA's U.S. (online here) and Saudi (online here) catalogs.

You'll find all the same stuff.

But you won't find women in the Saudi catalog.

The company is apologizing for what somebody (the person or persons haven't been identified) must have thought was a way to make sure IKEA didn't offend any shoppers in a male-dominated country where women are supposed to cover themselves in public, still aren't allowed to drive and lack other rights that are basic in many other countries. All images of women (more than a dozen) have been digitally erased in the Saudi version.

As ABC News' Business blog reports:

"We should have reacted and realized that excluding women from the Saudi Arabian version of the catalog is in conflict with the IKEA Group values," Ikea says in a statement.

The Wall Street Journal adds that:

"This is the second time in less than two weeks that IKEA's marketing photos have stirred political controversy.

"The company, looking to avoid a potential political fallout, on Sept. 21 deleted a photo from its Russian corporate Web page showing four young people in balaclavas that could have been viewed as a gesture of support for three jailed members of Russian punk group Pussy Riot. The deleted photo was part of a Russian marketing campaign that included a photo competition in Russian MEGA shopping malls, which receive about 200 million visitors per year."

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