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Ukrainians see red after as Coca-Cola revises Russian map to include Crimea

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Coca-Cola’s map of Russia, including the territory of Crimea. The peninsula’s inclusion stirred outrage in Ukraine. Photo: Twitter
Agence France-Presse

All Coca-Cola wanted to do was to wish consumers a Happy New Year, but instead it ended up stirring anger in two markets, Russia and Ukraine, over the disputed territory of Crimea.

The Ukrainian Black Sea peninsula was annexed by Moscow in March 2014 and remains a trigger issue in the Russian-Ukrainian crisis today.

In a New Year’s message on VK, the most popular Russian social media network, Coca-Cola published a celebratory map of Russia that did not include Crimea.

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Faced with barrage of criticism from Russian VK users, it published the map again on Tuesday - this time with Crimea - and apologised.

For good measure, the new map also included the Kuril Islands, the western Pacific archipelago that Moscow seized in 1945 from Japan, which still claims it.

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The second version also included Kaliningrad, a Russian exclave situated between Poland and Lithuania, that is globally recognised as belonging to Moscow.

But by including Crimea, Coca-Cola unleashed a firestorm in Ukraine, where demands for a boycott of the popular soda got underway.

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