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Adelaide butcher’s “non-Halal” sign found to breach discrimination rules

An Adelaide butcher created a depiction which ‘incited hatred or contempt’, the advertising watchdog has found in a recent ruling.
Matthew Elmas
Butcher

A South Australian butcher has been pulled up for breaching advertising discrimination rules over a sticker in its window which said “non-Halal certified”.

Adelaide-based Valley Butchers found itself in hot water with the Advertising Standards Board in an August ruling published recently.

The majority of the board ruled in favour of a complaint who alleged a sticker in the butcher’s window, alongside a picture of an emu and kangaroos reading “non-Halal certified”, was offensive.

“It pokes fun of a specific group of people based on religious belief,” the complainant said.

“Jokes like this on a public shopfront perpetuate a culture of vilification towards religious minorities, that results in harm towards them.”

The business argued it put up the sign to inform customers it wasn’t Halal approved, a question it said is frequently asked, claiming there was “no malice” in the ad.

“I am just stating that we are not and that saves a lot of wasted time,” the business said.

Under section two of the Australian Association of National Advertisers Code of Ethics, businesses are prohibited from portraying people or depicting material in a way which discriminates against or vilifies a person or section of the community.

This applies to race, ethnicity, nationality, gender, age, sexual preference, religion, disability, mental illness or political beliefs.

The majority of the panel considered the sign amounted to a breach of the discrimination and vilification provisions within those rules.

“The majority of the panel considered that the sign’s wording and images amounted to a depiction that was inciting hatred or contempt of a group of people based on their religious practices or Muslim origin,” the panel said.

“Using the phrase ‘non-Halal certified’ in conjunction with imagery of Australian animals was a suggestion that Islamic dietary practices are not Australian,” the panel said.

“The majority of the panel also considered that this advertising would give a strong impression that people of a certain religion or ethnicity might not be welcome in the store.”

Noting public debate over Halal certification in recent years, the panel noted there was “no such thing” as a non-Halal certification, and the phrasing used by the butcher amounted to a statement that was “ridiculing of Halal certification”.

Valley Butchers has other stickers in its window that display its business name, logo and the words “Your one butcher”, under this are depictions of an emu and kangaroos, alongside the words “non-Halal certified” and “premium meats and smallgoods”.

“Had the sign stated ‘Not Halal approved’ or ‘Unfortunately, non Halal’ this would be less likely to have been considered discriminatory or vilifying signage,” the ad standards panel concluded.

SmartCompany contacted Valley Butchers’ for comment but did not receive a response prior to publication.

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