Burberry has become the latest luxury brand to temporarily shut its stores in Russia following Moscow’s invasion of its neighbour Ukraine, after similar moves in recent days by Louis Vuitton, Hermès, Kering, Chanel and Prada.
The British fashion brand has three stores in the country, including one run by a franchisee and one in Moscow’s famous Red Square. It had already announced last week that it had halted deliveries to the outlets but confirmed this weekend that it was shutting them for the time being.
Its decision to cease shipments to the country “due to operational challenges” had already effectively shut its online operations across the country. Burberry’s Russian site was still up and running as of Sunday evening, though international orders were likely to be disrupted further by Visa and Mastercard’s decision to pull out of the country, resulting in the majority of foreign transactions being blocked.
Luxury labels have been exempt from the EU’s latest round of sanctions, meaning France and Italy can continue to export luxury goods to Russia without any legal repercussions.
However, doing business and fulfilling orders in the region have become increasingly difficult amid restrictions on payments and transactions.
On Friday LVMH Moët Hennessy Louis Vuitton, owner of brands including Christian Dior, Givenchy and Bulgari, said it was shuttering its 124 boutiques in Russia from Sunday, while Kering, which owns Gucci and Saint Laurent, confirmed it would close its two shops in the country.
Chanel wrote on LinkedIn: “Given our increasing concerns about the current situation, the growing uncertainty and the complexity to operate, Chanel decided to temporarily pause its business in Russia.”
On Saturday Prada confirmed it
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