A recent racial outburst on twitter by Cape Town model, Jessica Leandra dos Santos Leandra, has been the subject of mainstream media reporting in the past 24-hours, reportedly causing an ‘outcry’ in South Africa’s fragile society still afflicted by its racial past.
Although noting that the incident may be viewed from the prism of race it is merely another example of how not to use social networking platforms.
After South African model Jessica Leandra
dos Santos angrily tweeted about being allegedly harassed by a shop
assistant yesterday, many were outraged at her choice of words.
The 20-year-old called the man a “kaffir” an extremely offensive racist slur, causing many in the country to demand she be held accountable for her tweet.
One quick-thinking Twitter user catalogued dos Santos’ tweets and many of the reactions from those in South Africa.
Dos Santos’ deleted the tweet and asked her followers to “forget it,”
saying she sent it in anger in response to being harassed.
Unfortunately for dos Santos, folks did not just forget it. Instead
they combed her tweets and found yet another instance when the model had
something offensive to say about black South Africans (she later
deleted that tweet as well).
After many complained, FHM South Africa stripped the model of
her title as the winner of its 2011 model competition and they’ve also
decided they will no longer work with dos Santos in the future.
FHM South Africa issued a statement cutting ties with dos Santos:
“We have removed all pictures of her from our website and will have
nothing to do with her in future. FHM is a proudly South African
magazine and say “No” to racism.”
Dos Santos’ main sponsor, diet company QuickTrim, also dropped her as their spokeswoman, citing her tweets.
“Due to the severity of the remarks by #JessicaLeandra #QuickTrimSA herewith ends our sponsorship to her with immediate effect!” the company tweeted.
Dos Santos issued an apology again asserting that she was merely
“acting in pure anger and frustration at the time” of her tweets, but
that she realizes that there is “no excuse” for using the k-word and
will use this experience as a learning experience.
Whether or not dos Santos can resurrect her once-rising career remains
to be seen, but one thing is sure: the tweets are ALWAYS watching, and
people need to think before they tweet.
Culled from AfricanOutlookOnline
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