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| Starbucks says it is closing its US stores May 29, 2018 to conduct "racial-bias education" after an incident in a Philadelphia shop (AFP Photo/KAREN BLEIER) |
New York (AFP) - Starbucks will close stores and corporate offices across the United States on May 29 to conduct "racial-bias education," the company announced Tuesday, following outrage over the arrest of two black men in one of its cafes.
It was the
latest bid by the behemoth coffee chain to recover from last Thursday's
incident in Philadelphia, which was captured on video and went viral, viewed
millions of times.
The video
posted on Twitter by a Starbucks client shows uniformed police questioning and
then handcuffing the two men, who offer no resistance, as a white client
repeatedly asks an officer, "What'd they do? What'd they do?"
Starbucks
said more than 8,000 stores would be closed on the afternoon of May 29 and
training provided to nearly 175,000 employees, and incorporated going forward.
CEO Kevin
Johnson, who has also apologized, said the company was "committed to being
a part of the solution" and that he had been in Philadelphia
"listening to the community, learning what we did wrong and the steps we
need to take to fix it."
"Closing
our stores for racial bias training is just one step in a journey that requires
dedication from every level of our company and partnerships in our local
communities," he said.
The
curriculum will be designed "to address implicit bias, promote conscious
inclusion, prevent discrimination and ensure everyone inside a Starbucks store
feels safe and welcome," the company said in a statement.
Philadelphia
police said they received a 911 call from a Starbucks worker who said the men
were trespassing, after refusing to buy anything. Police said officers had
"politely" asked the two to leave before finally arresting them.
They
reportedly asked first to use the bathroom, but were told it was only for
paying customers.
The two
men's lawyer Lauren Wimmer told a CBS affiliate in Philadelphia that they had
been waiting for a third man to arrive for a business meeting.
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Protestors
demonstrate outside a Starbucks on April 15, 2018 in Philadelphia,
Pennsylvania
(AFP Photo/Mark Makela)
|
Indignities, suspicion
Starbucks
declined to prosecute and the men were released.
Ex US
president Barack Obama's former attorney general Eric Holder and Bryan
Stevenson, a civil rights lawyer who has exonerated innocent prisoners on death
row, will be among those experts consulted on the curriculum, Starbucks said.
"Being
treated with respect and dignity at a place of public accommodation is an
essential aspect of full citizenship," tweeted NAACP Legal Defense Fund,
which fights for racial justice and which is also being consulted.
"The
reality is that most black Americans regularly face the indignities of being
treated with suspicion," it added.
"This
is a crucial next step in fighting implicit bias," tweeted Jonathan
Greenblatt, CEO of the Anti-Defamation League, another expert consulted.
The woman
who posted the video, Melissa DePino, said a Starbucks employee called police
because the men had not ordered anything, while they waited for a friend.
"All
the other white (people) are wondering why it's never happened to us when we do
the same thing," she tweeted.
"The men
were sitting there peacefully quietly and they were put in handcuffs and they
were walked out of the store, humiliated, embarrassed and put in a patrol
car," DePino subsequently told MSNBC television.
The video
drew widespread attention. Drummer Questlove of the group Roots tweeted a
question: "Waiting in a Starbucks while black is a crime?"
Starbucks
has also launched a review of training and practices to make reforms where
necessary, and once completed, this will be made available to other companies,
including their licensee partners, it said.
The company
has more than 25,000 coffee shops around the world.


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