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France Halts Shein Suspension Proceedings After Sex Dolls, Weapons Are Withdrawn

The French Finance Ministry observed that all the illegal products were no longer on Shein, but the retailer will remain under close surveillance by state services.
A woman on a beach holds up a phone with the Shein app open.
Worker's in Shein's supply chain are working excessive hours to produce thousands of new styles a day for the ultra-fast-fashion giant. (Shutterstock)

The French Finance Ministry on Friday halted the suspension proceedings of Chinese online retailer Shein initiated two days ago after the Chinese retailer withdrew all illicit products from its platforms.

The French government started the process to block Shein in France on Wednesday after it found childlike sex dolls and weapons for sale on its site, the same day the fast-fashion retailer opened its first physical shop in a Paris department store. The finance ministry said it would suspend Shein’s entire website in France, not just the marketplace, if banned products continue to be found for sale.

On Friday, the French consumer watchdog observed that all the illegal products, including medicines, were no longer on Shein, the ministry said in a statement.

Prime Minister Sebastien Lecornu asked the situation to be evaluated again next week, it added. “Shein will remain under close surveillance by state services.”

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“Shein remains committed to dialogue with the French authorities in order to address the concerns raised and to present the measures we have put in place to continue improving,” the company said in a statement.

Judicial proceedings seeking the suspension of the platform are unaffected by Friday’s decision, Lecornu said in a separate statement.

The interior ministry has opened a case against Shein in a court in Paris, while a prosecutor has opened four investigations over the sale of the sex dolls, and customs will keep controlling all the goods it has seized.

The French authorities will also investigate other platforms where the sale of illegal products were also spotted, the ministry said.

By Inti Landauro; Editing by Leslie Adler and Richard Chang

Learn more:

The Frayed Edge: The Cost of Being Shein

The ultra-fast-fashion giant’s first permanent store opening in Paris has been a source of high drama.

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