Starbucks Korea Head Fired After Promotion Sparks Public Uproar
By Reuters | 18 May, 2026
Food conglomerate Shinsegae Group fired the head of Starbucks Korea after a promotion campaign was deemed to evoke tragedies during democracy protests.
A Starbucks logo is seen at a Starbucks coffee shop in Seoul, South Korea, March 7, 2016. Picture taken March 7, 2016. REUTERS/Kim Hong-Ji
South Korea's food conglomerate Shinsegae Group has fired the head of Starbucks Korea after a promotion campaign sparked public uproar on the anniversary of pro-democracy protests.
• Shinsegae, the South Korean licensee of the U.S. coffee chain, said in statement on Monday that Chairman Chung Yong-jin sacked Sohn Jeong-hyun, the head of Starbucks Korea, for carrying out "inappropriate marketing."
• Hours earlier the South Korean coffee chain launched a "Tank Day" promotion, which South Koreans saw as a reminder of military tanks ramming protesters who fought against dictatorship in 1980s. The promotion offered discounts to customers who bought tumblers. The campaign used wording that recalled a former South Korean official's explanation for the death of a student protester in 1987, who was found to have been tortured.
• South Korea marked Democratisation Movement Day on Monday, the anniversary of the student-led Gwangju uprising. Hundreds, and possibly thousands, are believed to have been killed when citizens rose up against military dictator Chun Doo-hwan on May 18, 1980.
• Starbucks Korea posted a statement on website apologising for the promotion.
• President Lee Jae Myung said on X that he was "enraged" and demanded the company apologise to families of people killed during the uprising.
(Reporting by Heejin Kim; Editing by Sam Holmes)
Recent Articles
- Corsair Sea Drone Rescues Crew of Crashed US Army Chopper Near Hormuz
- China Prepares $295 Billion Plan to Fund Nationwide AI Buildout
- Musk's Starlink Far Ahead of Bezos' Amazon in Wi-Fi Rush by Airlines
- Volvo-Parent Geely's Driver Assistance System Certified by EU
- Xi Embraces North Korea As Key Ally in Contest with US
- Samsung Electronics Considers Building Chip Packaging Plant
- How Honda’s CEO Survived a Putsch by the Old Guard
- Chinese Hackers' Spying Poses Biggest Threat to Tech Firms Says CrowdStrike
- J.M. Smucker Upbeat on Annual Profits on Higher Coffee Prices, At-Home Dining
- Embraer's Electric Aircraft Subsidiary Provides Revenue Boost
