Wednesday, November 12, 2014

Plastic surgery so drastic they can't get past airport security! How Chinese women are flying to South Korea for a more 'Western' face



Chinese women who are entering South Korea seeking skilled plastic surgeons are undergoing such transformative procedures that they are struggling to get past airport security on their way home.
 
Yan Xu, a 22-year-old broker, pictured before (left) and after surgery (right). She had eyelid surgery, a nose job, and chin implants


The extensive surgeries, which can include reducing excess skin in the upper eyelid to make the eyes appear bigger and more 'Western', are transforming some Chinese women's entire faces, rendering them almost unrecognizable.
To combat the issue, some hospitals have resorted to handing out 'plastic surgery certificates' - which include the patient's passport number, the name of the hospital they were treated at and the length of their visit to South Korea - to enable the women to re-enter China.
 
Zhang Cher, a 27-year-old aspiring singer, pictured before (left) and after surgery (right)

Yang Jiayi, a 21-year-old clerk, before (left) and after (right) surgery. Yang had her eye shape altered and received eyelash extensions


China Daily reported that some women have been stopped at passport control because they were noted to have bigger eyes, higher noses and slimmer chins than in the photographs shown in their passports.

After careful checks had been carried out, the women were allowed into China but they were all advised to renew their passports immediately.

'After they took off their huge hats and big sunglasses following our request, we saw them looking different, with bandages and stitches here and there,' Shanghai Hongqiao Airport officer Chen Tao told China Daily. 

Plastic surgery is now such big business in South Korea that it is attracting thousands of clients daily from across the border in China.
And the mostly female clients return to China as 'live adverts' for the South Korean surgeons.
 
Huang Silan, a 20-year-old lounge singer, before (left) and after surgery (right)

Liu Yisong, a 26-year-old dance teacher, before (left) and after (right) her plastic surgery

Before and after photos, which feature women who have undergone sometimes numerous procedures, have been drawing attention since they were posted on Chinese news sites

It is believed that the rise of the country's music industry is behind the boom and many patients visit clinics with photos of celebrities, asking surgeons to emulate American noses or eyes.
 
A 26-year-old Wuhan woman named Yumei Xie, who works as a jazz instructor, before (left) and after (right) her extensive surgery


Some women for example also undergo Intense Pulsed Light treatment, a procedure which can, among other things, be employed to lighten the skin

Xu Yan, a 21-year-old kindergarten teacher, pictured before (left) and after surgery (right). Xu underwent the V-line surgery, nose reconstruction surgery and received Botox injections



 

Syrian boy ‘fakes death to rescue girl from sniper fire’



 God is Good all the time !!

==========



A VIDEO has surfaced that appears to show a brave Syrian boy faking his own death in order to save a small girl from heavy sniper fire. 

The one-minute clip, posted to YouTube by activist group Shaam News Network, seems to show the young boy dodging sniper bullets, before falling to the ground as if he were hit.

During the following break in gunfire, he gets up and runs to the aid of another child hiding behind a burnt-out car. The pair then sprint to safety, hand-in-hand, while bullets kick up dust around them.
The men filming the apparent rescue from behind a brick wall can be heard shouting “allahu akbar” (God is great).





he video, seen close to 200,000 times since it was uploaded on Monday, could not be independently verified, the UK Telegraph reports.
However, experts told the newspaper they have no reason to doubt its authenticity