Saudi Arabia asked a Japanese company to make face masks similar to royal family princes and the King Salman

A Japanese company specializing in manufacturing the so-called facial masks, which exactly resemble the human face, has exposed the fact of receiving orders from Saudi princes to manufacture masks similar to King of Saudi Arabia Salman bin Abdul Aziz and a number of princes.
According to Reuters, in a report quoting the Japanese newspaper “Japan Times” has confirmed that the professional Japanese company that bodies associated with the Saudi government asked them to manufacture masks that mimic the face of the king and some princes.
The company explained that it had received orders from the royal family to manufacture masks disguised from the face of King Salman and a number of princes, under the pretext that they will be used to be displayed in public places, According to “Japan Times” newspaper.
The company noted that it usually receives orders to manufacture such masks for automobile and technology companies, and sometimes receives orders from some organizations, explaining that the price of one mask cost about $ 2,600.
It is worth mentioning that the super-realistic plastic face masks produced by Otsu company in the Japanese Shiga province, have recently attracted attention at home and abroad from facelift system developers.
On the mechanism of making these masks, the company explained that a prototype of the mask is being created using three-dimensional facial data, taken from images captured by a technology confirmed by 60-year-old company president Osamu Kitagawa as a “business secret”.
The details are then engraved on the mask using a “chisel” and then the resin is placed over it, and it takes about two weeks to complete the mask, which simulates every detail of the real human face.
It is likely that the intention behind the Saudi demand is clear and doesn’t require much intelligence to explain it, especially in the light of kidnappings, disappearances, killing of princes and other figures in order perhaps to misguide the media, local and international public opinion.