Point of contention: the halal label on this Swiss chocolate (Copyright 2016 The Associated Press. All rights reserved.) Some consumers in Switzerland and abroad have been questioning the halal label on Toblerone chocolate bars. Although certified as halal in April, it was only this week that a small storm began brewing on social media – with some people calling for boycotts of the chocolate produced by Mondelez in Bern. In recent years, voter-approved bans on burkas and minarets in Switzerland have reflected fear of Islam among some members of the primarily Christian population. The Toblerone recipe, which has always been halal as well as kosher, has not changed. But the relatively new halal certification makes
Topics:
Swissinfo considers the following as important: 3) Swiss Markets and News, Business, Featured, newsletter
This could be interesting, too:
Eamonn Sheridan writes CHF traders note – Two Swiss National Bank speakers due Thursday, November 21
Charles Hugh Smith writes How Do We Fix the Collapse of Quality?
Marc Chandler writes Sterling and Gilts Pressed Lower by Firmer CPI
Michael Lebowitz writes Trump Tariffs Are Inflationary Claim The Experts
Some consumers in Switzerland and abroad have been questioning the halal label on Toblerone chocolate bars.
Although certified as halal in April, it was only this week that a small storm began brewing on social media – with some people calling for boycotts of the chocolate produced by Mondelez in Bern.
In recent years, voter-approved bans on burkas and minarets in Switzerland have reflected fear of Islam among some members of the primarily Christian population.
The Toblerone recipe, which has always been halal as well as kosher, has not changed. But the relatively new halal certification makes export easier.
On Sunday, Swiss tabloid Blickexternal link ran an article, “Toblerone is now halal”. Other media outlets also picked up the story, and comments began appearing on social media.
One was from Germany’s federal spokesman for the Alternative for Germany party, who on Facebook wrote, “There is no Islamization – not in Germany nor in Europe. It is therefore certainly pure coincidence that the well-known chocolate variety is now certified as ‘halal’.”
Additional articles in the Swiss media downplayed the development. As the site Nau.chexternal link pointed out, other products such as Maggi, Nespresso capsules and Emmi’s Emmentaler cheese are also halal-certified.
A headline in the Neue Zürcher Zeitungexternal link read: “Toblerone is now halal – so what?”. The article mentioned that Ricola throat lozenges were also halal.
And “Why the indignation at the Halal-Toblerone is absurd” was how Swiss online platform watson.chexternal link described the fuss.
Tags: Business,Featured,newsletter