Monday, January 19, 2026 | 07:29 PM ISTहिंदी में पढें
Business Standard
Notification Icon
userprofile IconSearch

Street art takes on street waste in Libreville

AFP Libreville (Gabon)
Fed up with the overpowering stench of urine in Libreville's streets, artist Regis Divassa decided to take action -- by spray-painting over soiled walls in a bid to get the Gabonese capital's residents to keep their city clean.

"Gabonese men have a great habit, once they drink too much, they spray the walls," said the 34-year-old artist.

Not only are hidden street corners used as make-shift toilets, even walls of residential homes are hit.

If it is understandable to go behind a tree in a rural setting where it might be hard to find a toilet, in Libreville, an urban city of about half a million people, the habit is causing anguish among residents.
 

Eugenie Assoumou Mengue knows what it is like to live in a house which has walls that are regularly sprayed.

"We're suffering, it's hellish. People come and urinate here and we get the smells that make us really sick," she said, indicating an area on her walls where cement was flaking off.

Her efforts to fend off the unwelcomed visitors have come to nothing. "They insult me. I hope Regis can motivate them to stop," said Assoumou Mengue, who came outside to see Divassa spray-paint the slogan "Stop urinating!" on one of the walls.

Divassa, an artist, cinema set designer and rap artist, has teamed up with his partner "Blatino" to target areas in Libreville that are thick with filth, spraying slogans or full-fledged frescoes to get people to stop think twice.

"Graffiti is like a picture. If people see something beautiful on the wall, they won't come and pee against it," said Divassa. "Street art is something young people appreciate."

For Divassa, street art is a political act, a kind of rebellion that can serve to raise public awareness about not just the toilet issue, but also the general filth problem plaguing Libreville.

Besides the struggle to get people to use toilets, uncleared waste has also become a bugbear for Libreville's citizens and regularly hits the national headlines.

In nearly every neighbourhood in the city, piles of rubbish can be seen rising metres high up near bins that no one empties, stewing under suffocating heat and emitting putrid smells.

The rubbish "even holds up the traffic because it overflows onto the road and cars can't get past," said one shoe seller from his tiny shop.

"The town hall has to do something," he said. Each month he pays a cleanliness tax of USD 50 "without knowing what it's for.

Don't miss the most important news and views of the day. Get them on our Telegram channel

First Published: Nov 03 2013 | 10:10 AM IST

Explore News