A photo of three Chinese women holding a passport sitting at a Korean airport recently roused netizens. After the surgery, the faces of the three are still swollen and wrapped in gauze bandages so the customs officer can not recognize anyone with whom, determined not to pass.
Cosmetic surgery clinics in Korea are renowned for being of the best quality in the world, so many women in Asian countries including China and Japan often come to Korea for aesthetic reasons.
But few people just lift the nose, or botox injections. Most of them came to Korea to edit their faces and as a result the airport staff met with many difficulties to identify the real person with the person in the passport photo.
Many cosmetic surgery clinics in Korea provide cosmetic surgery certificates to international clients to persuade customs that they are the ones in the photo. This certificate includes the passport number, length of stay, name and address of the hospital and the seal of the hospital.
Customs will look for familiar features that have not been modified on the face to identify and most will pass. Unfortunately for the three Chinese women, their certificate did not help and was retained by the staff because all three had not recovered from the operation.
After the surgery, the faces of the three are still swollen and wrapped in bandages so the customs officer can not recognize anyone with whom.
A photo of a three-year-old woman holding a passport at the airport raised the netizen's image.
One commentator said: "Swollen face like that does not recognize the mother."
According to OC