"It is remarkably daft to make bra-like bikinis for one-year-olds," Norwegian Minister of Children and Family Affairs Laila Daavoey was quoted as telling the Norwegian daily Verdens Gang on Thursday.
"This is a terrible commercialisation of childhood. Children are not women. Bikinis on small children are a way of linking children to sexuality. We must say 'No' to this," she said. Swedish clothes maker Lindex said it would withdraw one design of top, meant for girls aged 1-2, after an internal review. "It's a bit too similar to an adult top so we are choosing to withdraw it," spokeswoman Ulrika Danielson told Norway's NRK public radio.
She said the decision was made independently of the Norwegian criticism. Earlier this month, Norwegian Prime Minister Kjell Magne Bondevik criticised Swedish furniture maker IKEA for showing few women assembling flat-packed goods in cartoon instruction leaflets. IKEA agreed to depict more women. Norway is celebrating 100 years of independence from Sweden in 2005.
Reuters