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coach addison baby bag of the product, is the subject of heated debate."They mock black people's features and are reminiscent of colonial oppression and overt racism. They have no place in Sutton and should not be on display."Coun Holloway, a representative of Sutton North ward, has organised the protest on Facebook, and will be speaking on BBC radio this weekend to galvanise support for the protest.A spokesman for the Memory Lane shop said: "I respect Coun Holloway's right to protest, but we do not believe stocking and selling the dolls is an offence or offensive."He said the shop had received only one other complaint in the 10 years it had stocked the dolls.Police and Sutton trading standards have been consulted by Coun Holloway over the matter but have not taken action because selling the dolls is not illegal.A Sutton police spokesman said: "There are no criminal offences. This is a matter between individuals and the store."A Sutton Council spokesman said: "We understand the historical origins of the golliwog mean some people find them offensive but no law isbeing broken and there is no action for the council or the police to take."Protesters will meet outside Sutton station at noon on Friday, October 7, before marching on the store. Based on a minstrel doll, the character was adopted by Enid Blyton in her Noddy books, as a badly behaved and often criminal figure. In recent years, it has become a figure of controversy after being interpreted by many as a crude racial stereotype, with the term was used as a racial slur. It was removed from the famous Robertson jam label in 2001 after public and