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Seoul to limit plastic surgery ads

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The South Korean capital Seoul is to restrict the use of plastic surgery adverts on public transport, officials said Wednesday, after complaints that they were fuelling an unhealthy obsession with body image.

South Korea, and particularly Seoul, has an international reputation for plastic surgery, and adverts featuring famous surgeons and giant before-and-after photos are omnipresent -- on street billboards, subway trains, bus stops and the backs of bus seats.

In the Apgujeong subway station at the heart of the upscale Gangnam district -- home to hundreds of cosmetic surgery clinics -- around half of all advertising prints and hoardings are promoting nose jobs, facelifts and other nips and tucks.

Under the new regulations, no more than 20 percent of advertising at any subway station can be connected with the plastic surgery industry.

A pedestrian walks past an advertisement for plastic surgery clinic at a subway station in Seoul on ...
A pedestrian walks past an advertisement for plastic surgery clinic at a subway station in Seoul on March 26, 2014
Jung Yeon-Je, AFP

"We have received a growing number of complaints from citizens who say these ads further promote an obsession with looks and are disturbing to look at," a municipal official told AFP.

"Overly sensational" before-and-after shots and slogans will be banned, he added.

The adverts will also be prohibited in areas such as bus stops close to elementary, middle and high schools, said city council official Lee Chang-Min.

"Many people complained these ads make people, including youngsters, believe that plastic surgery can be done so easily," Lee said.

Both officials said complaints surged after several fatal incidents involving botched plastic surgery.

Earlier this month a 34-year-old woman died of asphyxiation while having surgery on her nose and a man in his 30s died three days after undergoing a procedure on his jawbone.

Last December, a high school girl fell into a coma while having a nose surgery.

The South Korean capital Seoul is to restrict the use of plastic surgery adverts on public transport, officials said Wednesday, after complaints that they were fuelling an unhealthy obsession with body image.

South Korea, and particularly Seoul, has an international reputation for plastic surgery, and adverts featuring famous surgeons and giant before-and-after photos are omnipresent — on street billboards, subway trains, bus stops and the backs of bus seats.

In the Apgujeong subway station at the heart of the upscale Gangnam district — home to hundreds of cosmetic surgery clinics — around half of all advertising prints and hoardings are promoting nose jobs, facelifts and other nips and tucks.

Under the new regulations, no more than 20 percent of advertising at any subway station can be connected with the plastic surgery industry.

A pedestrian walks past an advertisement for plastic surgery clinic at a subway station in Seoul on ...

A pedestrian walks past an advertisement for plastic surgery clinic at a subway station in Seoul on March 26, 2014
Jung Yeon-Je, AFP

“We have received a growing number of complaints from citizens who say these ads further promote an obsession with looks and are disturbing to look at,” a municipal official told AFP.

“Overly sensational” before-and-after shots and slogans will be banned, he added.

The adverts will also be prohibited in areas such as bus stops close to elementary, middle and high schools, said city council official Lee Chang-Min.

“Many people complained these ads make people, including youngsters, believe that plastic surgery can be done so easily,” Lee said.

Both officials said complaints surged after several fatal incidents involving botched plastic surgery.

Earlier this month a 34-year-old woman died of asphyxiation while having surgery on her nose and a man in his 30s died three days after undergoing a procedure on his jawbone.

Last December, a high school girl fell into a coma while having a nose surgery.

AFP
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With 2,400 staff representing 100 different nationalities, AFP covers the world as a leading global news agency. AFP provides fast, comprehensive and verified coverage of the issues affecting our daily lives.

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