Gulf Today

China’s child modelling industry booms amid controvers­y

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BEIJING: Manicured children strut down the catwalk at a Beijing fashion show, one of thousands of events driving huge demand for child models in China that insiders warn leaves minors vulnerable to physical abuse, 12-hour-days and unrelentin­g pressure from pushy parents. The kids’ apparel market is growing faster than any other clothing sector in the country and was worth more than $40.5 billion in 2018 according to Euromonito­r. This combined with the rise of “kidfluence­rs” sponsored by brands to promote products on social media is spurring greater demand for young models — but experts warn of the heavy cost of pursuing such deals.

“If children don’t listen to the parents then I think hiting them is quite standard,” Lee Ku, founder of Le Show Stars modelling school, told AFP. A video of a mother kicking her three-year-old daughter in fury at her failure to comply during a modelling job went viral earlier this year, causing outrage online. And footage emerged in early August online of a young boy modelling thick winter clothes outside as temperatur­es soared to 37 degrees Celsius, also drawing heavy online criticism. But in an industry where minors can earn 10,000 yuan ($1,450)a session, Lee says the clip is the tip of the of the iceberg and that from his experience, such violent behaviour from parents was not unusual on shoots.

Child models sometimes go through more than 100 outfit changes in a session, oten working from morning till night.

But mental health experts warn it is not just physical exhaustion they have to contend with — there may be long term emotional implicatio­ns. “Children from the age of zero to six are mentally developing, they need a lot of exploratio­n and freedom,” explained child psychologi­st Gong Xueping. “At work, the child model will deliberate­ly show a lot of different expression­s... but this is contrary to the child’s own feelings of the moment. This limits the developmen­t of both emotional abilities and more complex psychologi­cal abilities for children, so I think it’s a very bad choice,” Gong added.

But there remains no shortage of parents interested in pushing their children into the profession. Founded three years ago, Le Show Stars was one of the first modelling schools in Beijing, where customers pay up to 800 yuan for a private one-on-one lessons. Four-year-old twins Yumi and Yuki Xiao are not yet profession­al models but for nearly two years they have been taking classes where they are taught how to pose and pace the catwalk in the hopes that they can break into the industry. “For some catwalking competitio­ns, they have to be in the makeup room by 6am,” their father Xiao Liang said. “The real competitio­n starts at 2pm, and they finish around 3pm or 4. So the whole thing, takes a whole day. From 6am to 6pm -- 12 hours is prety standard.” Their parents invest in taking them around the country to compete in hundreds of national child modelling competitio­ns.

“It’s a lot of fun I like being on stage,” insisted Yumi. Like many other parents Xiao says he initially enrolled the two in child modelling to build their self confidence, but ater Yumi and Yuki showed interest they started to invest more time and money into building a possible child modelling career path for them. Occasional­ly the twins are paid to model seasonal fashion lines for big brands. “I think they are one of a kind, firstly, they’re twins, and they’re also boy-girl twins,” father Xiao says proudly. “They also like it, which is why we are giving them this opportunit­y. I think they have a natural advantage over other kids,” he added.

China’slawsaroun­dchildlabo­urarecompl­icated and parents of underage models are sometimes paid in secret to sidestep the red tape required to employ them. Responding to the kicking video, Hangzhou authoritie­s introduced regulation­s to limit the hours children work and ban children under 10 from being brand spokespeop­le. But many feel authoritie­s are doing too litle to protect kids from exploitati­on. More than 110 child retailers on e-commerce giant Taobao said they would scale back use of young models, and also demanded more regulation­s. Thousands have debated the topic online, calling for rules to be tightened to prevent abuse.

 ?? Agence France-presse ?? A child model parading on the catwalk at a child model contest in Beijing.
Agence France-presse A child model parading on the catwalk at a child model contest in Beijing.

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