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Alia Bhatt slams online videos, clickbait articles claiming she had ‘Botox gone wrong’

Bollywood star Alia Bhatt on Friday strongly hit back at claims circulating in online videos and clickbait articles that she had a botched Botox procedure. The Jigra actor posted a lengthy statement on her Instagram Stories and said the rumours...
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Bollywood star Alia Bhatt on Friday strongly hit back at claims circulating in online videos and clickbait articles that she had a botched Botox procedure. The Jigra actor posted a lengthy statement on her Instagram Stories and said the rumours about her undergoing a cosmetic surgery are ‘beyond ridiculous’ and ‘damaging’. “Absolutely No Judgement towards anyone who chooses cosmetic corrections or surgery-your body, your choice. But wow, this is beyond ridiculous! To the random video floating around literally claiming I’ve had Botox gone wrong (and to the numerous clickbait articles) - I have a ‘crooked smile’ and a ‘weird way of speaking’ according to You,” she said.

“This is your hypercritical, microscopic judgement of a human face. And now you’re confidently tossing around ‘scientific’ explanations, claiming I’m paralysed on one side? Are you kidding me?” she added.

Bhatt, 31, criticised that ‘serious claims’ about her are being “casually thrown out there with zero proof, no confirmation, and absolutely nothing to back it up”.

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“What’s worse, you’re influencing young, impressionable minds who might actually believe this garbage. Why are you saying this? For clickbait? Attention? Because none of it makes sense,” she added.

The actor said women are often judged through an “absurd lens” and are objectified on the internet for “our faces, bodies, personal lives, even our bumps”. “We should be celebrating individuality, not tearing it apart under a microscope. These types of judgments perpetuate unrealistic standards, making people feel like they’re never ‘enough’ It’s damaging, and it’s exhausting,” she added. What is even more saddening is that such kinds of judgement is perpetuated by women, Bhatt said.

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