Oprah Winfrey |
The US talk show host, 59, says she was the victim of racism during a
visit to Switzerland where she was attending Tina Turner’s wedding last
month.
Winfrey said a shop assistant refused to serve her in an
upmarket Zurich handbag shop, having said the bags on offer were “too
expensive” for her.
The TV star said she left the shop without
contesting the shop assistant’s behaviour but contributed her experience
to a debate about the continued existence of racism on a US television
show.
Winfrey told Entertainment Tonight: "I was in Zurich the
other day, in a store whose name I will not mention. I didn't have my
eyelashes on, but I was in full Oprah Winfrey gear. I had my little
Donna Karan skirt and my little sandals. But obviously The Oprah Winfrey Show is not shown in Zurich.”
"I
go into a store and I say to the woman, 'Excuse me, may I see the bag
right above your head?' and she says to me, 'No. It's too expensive.'"
When
Winfrey insisted she did want to see the bag the shop assistant
allegedly replied: "No, no you don’t want to see that one, you want to
see this one because that one will cost too much. You will not be able
to afford that."
Winfrey, who is a billionaire, continued:
"There's two different ways to handle it. I could've had the whole
blow-up thing... but [racism] still exists, of course it does."
Blick
newspaper reported that Trudie Goetz, the owner of the boutique Winfrey
was allegedly talking about, Trois Pommes, had apologised for the
incident and called it a “misunderstanding”.
Oprah’s allegations
come amid a political row over plans by some Swiss towns to ban
asylum-seekers from frequenting public places such as school
playgrounds, swimming pools and libraries.
The draconian
restrictions have been likened to Apartheid and angrily denounced by
human rights groups as intolerable and racist.
Switzerland plays
host to almost double the number of asylum-seekers per head of
population of its European neighbours. It counts one refugee for every
332 inhabitants, compared to one per 625 inhabitants on the rest of the
continent. Some 48,000 refugees are currently seeking asylum in
Switzerland.
In June this year voters took part in a referendum
which overwhelmingly backed moves to tighten asylum restrictions amid
fears voiced by the popular right-wing Swiss People’s Party that the
country was being inundated with refugees.
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