Gulf Today

Graffiti artists in Senegal raise awareness on coronaviru­s

The RBS CREW, a collective of graffiti artists, have offered up their spray cans in the cause of public health with murals on walls in Senegal’s seaside capital Dakar

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The mural stretched over 10 metres of wall in Senegal’s seaside capital Dakar shows a giant pair of hands reaching out for sanitiser, and a woman in hoop earrings and a facemask coloured blue, red, gold and green.

It is the work of RBS CREW, a collective of graffiti artists who have offered up their spray cans in the cause of public health.

Black and yellow block letters spell out the message “Together against COVID-19,” referring to the disease caused by the coronaviru­s.

“A big thank you to the caregivers,” reads another message scrawled out like a graffiti tag, next to the government’s health hotline on the high school wall.

“As Senegalese we have a duty, a responsibi­lity to raise awareness,” said Serigne Mansour Fall, the 33-year-old head of the collective who goes by the name “Mad Zoo”.

“Especially as the majority of the population is illiterate, as artists, we can communicat­e through visuals,” said Fall, whose past work has focused more on Dakar street life and Malcolm X.

Senegal had reported 119 cases and no deaths as of Friday. Figures reported across Africa are still relatively small compared with parts of Asia and Europe, but the World Health Organizati­on has warned the continent’s window to act is narrowing.

That, said Fall, makes it even more important to encourage prevention measures and head off false informatio­n, including one online rumour that only white people can catch the disease.

Other murals painted around Dakar by the collective show people washing their hands with soap and water and sneezing into their elbows.

Each year for the past decade, Dakar has also hosted the Festigraff festival, which bills itself as the leading graffiti festival in Africa and attracts artists from around the world. RBS CREW was set up in 2012 with the goal, according to its website, of making messages ring out “like blasts of gunfire”.

Footage from Senegal surfaced last week showing policemen beating people found outside after a night curfew.

In one video, officials force three young men to do squats after they were caught exercising at night.

“No torture, no inhuman degrading treatment and no excessive use of force,” pleaded Amnesty Internatio­nal’s former West and Central Africa director Alioune Tine. Police eventually assured that all “excessive interventi­ons” had been punished.

Yet the risk of a beating has done little to stop citizens across the continent from pursuing their daily activities.

The need to make a living trumps both fears of catching the deadly virus and encounteri­ng the police, prompting law enforcemen­t officers to step up their show of force.

More than 1,100 people have been arrested for lockdown violations in South Africa, while Ivory Coast has detained 450 for failing to respect curfew.

Ivorian Human Rights Movement (MIDH) chief Doumbia Yacouba said many of the detainees had been beaten and mistreated.

 ?? Associated Press ?? A member of the Senegalese graffiti collective ‘RBS CREW’ paints informatio­nal murals in Dakar.
Associated Press A member of the Senegalese graffiti collective ‘RBS CREW’ paints informatio­nal murals in Dakar.

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