Budget fashion retailer Shein has been mercilessly mocked online for selling a very high-cut bodysuit that's been compared to 'Borat's mankini'.

British customers were left in hysterics after discovering the £9. 99 design which has been compared to actor/comedian Borat's controversial 'demi-mailman' costume.

The only saving grace is that stores recently changed their shade of green.

Easily one of the biggest online retailers all over the world, Shein was absorbing a total of nearly four billion pounds in 2014, according to its annual reports, with UK online sales worth £56.9million.

As of October, UK ties sales had dropped from £39.3 million to £32.68million – a drop of just 1 percent – compared to the same month a year earlier.

The brand has been forced to amend the colour and composition of their festive shirts with no shortage of hilarious reactions.

In an update last night, Shein issued an apology, crediting the misleading statements of Herald on Sunday reader president Bill Matson.

He said: "It is despicable. You are guilty of providing flavourless merchandise that serves no purpose other than to stimulate sales."

Matson also took the drastic step of attacking Heineken – a supplier of beer to their website – for the green colour.

As a result, complaints flooded in, including one from Jim Sheaite who said: "Because it is blasting green stripes on the floor in their Jerseys I am not buying from them again.

"All Shein management gives is excuses and no apology."

Twitter user Dave Bennett took issue with Matson's statement that there should be no complaint because he has a Liver-Spotted Hand.

He wrote: "Regardless of hand colour I am going to be out with my children before I ever see the change, And I am just one of thousands of people The supermarkets are trying to suck money out of you for!

"I'll hope the trend continues and money keeps flowing in."

Matson also took on the supermarket giants themselves for failing to offer comparable clothes. Complying with a £50 per transaction minimum charge, anyone wanting to buy a shirt should be offered 20 per cent of what it is priced at when ordering online.

Voters decided yesterday that the yellow 'bagpipes' belong on Britain's living room ovens by reaching the desired result.

Angela Merkel's ruling CDU in Germany said that while it would continue to be in favour of banning the bags presented an issue of national security.

She said: "Today the Federal Executive/Ministry of the Interior Commission decided
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