Yorkshire Post

‘Coronaviru­s hairstyle’ helps to raise awareness

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CORONAVIRU­S HAS revived a hairstyle in East Africa featuring braided spikes that echo the virus’s distinctiv­e shape.

The style’s growing popularity is in part due to economic hardships linked to virus restrictio­ns – it is cheap, mothers say – and to the goal of spreading awareness that the coronaviru­s is real.

The hairstyle had gone out of fashion in recent years as imported real and synthetic hair from India, China and Brazil began to flood the market and demand for the hair increased.

Pictures of the flowing or braided imported styles are tacked up in beauty salons across much of Africa.

But now, in a makeshift salon beside a busy road in Kibera, a slum in the heart of the Kenyan capital Nairobi, 24-year-old hairdresse­r Sharon Refa braids young girls’ hair into the antennae-like spikes that people call the “coronaviru­s hairstyle”.

Girls shift in the plastic chairs as she tugs at their scalps.

“Some grown-ups don’t believe that the coronaviru­s is real, but then most young children appear keen to sanitise their hands and wear masks.

“So many adults do not do this, and that is why we came up with the corona hairstyle,” Ms Refa said, her face mask tucked under her chin.

Kenya’s number of confirmed virus cases was nearing 700 as of Monday. With the widespread shortage of testing materials, however, the real number of cases could be higher.

Health officials are especially worried about the possible spread of the virus in crowded slums.

Mothers like Margaret Andeya, who is struggling to make ends meet, said the coronaviru­s hairstyle suits her daughters’ styling needs and her pocket.

Virus-related restrictio­ns have stifled the daily work for millions of people. “This hairstyle is much more affordable for people like me who cannot afford to pay for the more expensive hairstyles out there and yet we want our kids to look stylish,” Ms Andeya said.

 ?? PICTURES: GETTY IMAGES ?? SPORTING CHANCE: Clockwise, from top, golfers wear facemasks as they stand on a driving range during a practice session at the “Bluegreen” Golf Course in Saint Aubin, south-west of Paris; a waiter serves cups of beer at a terrace of a bar in Seville, Spain; A teacher measures distance between tables at Jean-Jaures elementary school in Cenon near Bordeaux, southweste­rn France; Students from the General Education College in Godomey, Benin, buy masks before resuming school.
PICTURES: GETTY IMAGES SPORTING CHANCE: Clockwise, from top, golfers wear facemasks as they stand on a driving range during a practice session at the “Bluegreen” Golf Course in Saint Aubin, south-west of Paris; a waiter serves cups of beer at a terrace of a bar in Seville, Spain; A teacher measures distance between tables at Jean-Jaures elementary school in Cenon near Bordeaux, southweste­rn France; Students from the General Education College in Godomey, Benin, buy masks before resuming school.

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