In China, hair extensions, wigs and weaves are big business. Buyers
in hair salons and shopping malls are often told they are getting real human hair – but when you look closely, sometimes things are not as they seem.
In a tiny village in Hunan province, central China a man dressed in a
white vest and shorts rides around the dusty streets on a rusty
bicycle, shouting and ringing his bell.
I stop him and ask what he’s up to. “I’m collecting hair,” he says.
“When I ring my bell women come out and I cut their hair. I make hair
extensions.”
I ask him how much he pays women for their hair. “I offer them a good price, but I need to make a profit,” he says with a smile.
The streets of the village are covered in hair drying beneath the scorching sun. Some of the hair is definitely
human hair, yet the number of shaven goats wandering the streets suggests otherwise.
After collecting the hair, he takes it to a small factory where ten women weave it together into hair extensions.
Looking on, I can see that some of the hair being woven together is
human and some of it definitely is not. He then sells it to larger
factories where it is treated with chemicals before being sold to shops
around the country.
I left Hunan wanting to see where the hair went next. So I visited
the megacity of Guangzhou. The city – formerly known as Canton – has
always been one of China’s most important trading hubs and wealthiest
cities.
Massive hotels and office blocks dominate the skyline close to the
vast and murky brown Pearl River. The tops of the skyscrapers are
hidden amid the thick palpable pollution.
Beneath the smog is where I met Lily. She owns a shop selling wigs
and hair extensions in Guangzhou’s enormous beauty exchange centre in
an area known as Sanyuanli.
Here you can buy anything from nail polish and night cream to foot
spas and foundation. The lower floor of the market however is dedicated
to hair – terrifying mannequins sport wigs and weaves of every colour
the rainbow has to offer.
Lily sits on a stool in her shop, bunching the recently delivered
hair together into fringes, curls and metre-long straight extensions.
The hair is held together with labels which supposedly tell us their
country of origin. Here, apparently, one can buy hair from Peru, India
and Brazil.
There are no Chinese customers here though – every buyer seems to be
from Africa. Nigerians, Ghanaians, Congolese, South Africans, Angolans
and Ugandans scour the impressive hall for the best-priced hair
extensions available. They tell me they can triple their money when
they get home.
Towards the end of a busy day I ask shop owner Lily how her business
is doing. “It’s ok, we used to sell to Europe and America, but now
nearly 100% of my clients are in Africa,” she says.
Lily shows me a list of the nationalities of the traders she sells
to – of the 39 countries on the list, 37 are in Africa, reflecting the
large African community in this city.
“It’s good business for me, but the problem is we pay more for the
hair now, as living and production costs in China are higher now.”
Lily then describes, how in order to make her business profitable,
she has to use fake scales when weighing out hair to customers and buy a
mixture of human hair and synthetic or goat hair to lower costs.
“We say it is Indian hair or Brazilian hair, but in fact it is
normally Chinese hair or even goat hair. They never realise. This is
the only way we can keep things cheap,” she says, adding that her
customers always drive a hard bargain.
Before we can finish our conversation Marie from Uganda comes in,
demanding: “I want Brazilian hair, only Brazilian, give me your best
quality and best price.”
The negotiation goes on for hours under the watchful eyes of the
wig-wearing, angry-looking mannequins. As the sun sinks and the moon
begins to rise over Guangzhou’s polluted skyline, Marie leaves
empty-handed.
I run after her as she leaves the shop to ask if she knows that some
of the hair isn’t human. “Of course I know. The Chinese think we’re
silly. I come all the way from Uganda and they think I don’t know
hair,” she says.
Marie pauses and then lets out a huge, hearty laugh before coming
close to whisper in my ear: “I laugh a lot when I go home and I know
that the beautiful women of Kampala have goats on their heads.”
Source: BBC
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