Japan rock band Mrs Green Apple apologise, pull ‘outdated’ Columbus video

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The "Columbus" video by Mrs Green Apple sparked widespread social media criticism that it contained nods to slavery and discrimination.

The video has sparked widespread social media criticism that it contains nods to slavery and discrimination.

PHOTO: MRS GREEN APPLE/FACEBOOK

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TOKYO – Japanese rock band Mrs Green Apple have apologised and withdrawn their new song and music video, their record label said, after criticism of scenes showing Italian explorer Christopher Columbus singing with ape-like men.

The video for the song Columbus has the three members of the band depicting Columbus, French leader Napoleon Bonaparte and German composer Ludwig van Beethoven.

It shows them discovering an island inhabited by people who look like apes and teaching them how to ride horses and has them pulling a rickshaw.

Universal Music Japan, the band’s record label, said in a statement on June 13, a day after the video’s release, that it “contains expressions that lack understanding of historical and cultural backgrounds”.

Band member Motoki Ohmori also apologised, saying “we never had an intention of creating discriminatory content nor affirming tragic history”.

The video sparked widespread social media criticism that it contained nods to slavery and discrimination. Columbus began European incursions into the Americas in the late 15th century.

“A view of history that Columbus was a hero who ‘discovered’ the new continent is outdated,” one critic said on social media platform X, adding that “what happened post-Columbus is genocide of indigenous people and slavery”.

Another comment on YouTube said: “Wasn’t there anyone involved who had studied world history at all?” AFP

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