Charity gives Venus de Milo prosthetic arms in French campaign

A replica of the Venus de Milo, the famous armless Greek goddess statue, was endowed with two prosthetic limbs made by 3D printers for a campaign by Handicap International carried out in Paris on Tuesday. The operation at the Louvre metro station, just outside the museum in the French capital where the original Venus stands, urges an increased use of quickly made, but often more costly, 3D prosthetics instead of traditional devices. The replica has the goddess holding a moulded apple in her left hand. Other statues across Paris were also being fitted out with prosthetics, including several in the nearby Tuileries Garden such as the “Alexandre Combattant” (Alexander Fighting) by Charles Leboeuf. It was part of the charity’s #BodyCantWait campaign, which has already given 19 people resin-based “printed” limbs in Togo, Syria and Madagascar, and will soon provide them to more than 100 people in India. Handicap International says roughly 100 million peop