Advertisement
Advertisement
Wellness
Get more with myNEWS
A personalised news feed of stories that matter to you
Learn more
The 28-year-old victim, a teacher did not want to be identified over concerns about her job. Photo: HANDOUT

Beauty centre ‘cheats teacher in Hong Kong with claim that warts on neck would become contagious’

Staff at Mong Kok centre spent three hours persuading woman to sign up for treatment that she refused, only to find she had been charged HK$110,000

Wellness

A woman has claimed a beauty centre cheated her out of HK$110,000 with selling tactics that included telling her that warts on her neck would become contagious without treatment.

The 28-year-old victim, a teacher, visited a centre in Mong Kok in March for a skincare facial treatment and was persuaded repeatedly to sign up for other therapies.

Employees told her she must remove black spots on her neck and freckles on her faces or they would spread to other parts of her body and become infectious to others, she said.

“They told me the warts would spread through my arms by touching other people,” said the woman on Tuesday, who did not want to be identified over concerns about her job.

“Since my job [involves] regular contact with children, I believed them and paid for the removal treatment.”

During another visit, members of staff spent three hours persuading her to sign up for a massage, which she refused. But she said the sales clerk took her credit card and charged her anyway.

Employees at the centre told the woman she must remove warts on her neck or they would spread and become infectious to others. Photo: Shutterstock

She later found out she had been charged a total of HK$110,000 for the two courses of treatment, which she said she could not afford to pay.
The centre, which could not be reached for comment on Tuesday, refused to refund her.

Democratic Party member Yuen Hoi-man, who was assisting the woman, said the case has been reported to Hong Kong Customs and the Consumer Council. They would report to the police soon and urged the Department of Health to help.
In June, Yuen helped at least 42 victims who said they were duped out a total of HK$2.1 million by men who chatted up women on the internet and took them to beauty salons on a first date. The women were later asked to pay for the treatment and signed up for courses.

The beauty sector in Hong Kong has long been criticised for unscrupulous selling tactics and the government has been under fire for the slow process in regulating the industry.

This article appeared in the South China Morning Post print edition as: Customer ‘cheated in beauty treatment’
Post