The Prague Post - War, poverty, no internet: The trials of a C.Africa rapper

EUR -
AED 4.194361
AFN 73.094059
ALL 93.80832
AMD 420.063732
ANG 2.044819
AOA 1047.874554
ARS 1699.725634
AUD 1.647565
AWG 2.058635
AZN 1.938866
BAM 1.952799
BBD 2.302023
BDT 140.923459
BGN 1.931155
BHD 0.430957
BIF 3399.724876
BMD 1.1421
BND 1.474998
BOB 7.915184
BRL 5.905686
BSD 1.142974
BTN 108.888068
BWP 15.415717
BYN 3.316249
BYR 22385.161332
BZD 2.298728
CAD 1.62502
CDF 2565.156425
CHF 0.919956
CLF 0.026739
CLP 1052.37716
CNY 7.753835
CNH 7.760222
COP 3822.083561
CRC 520.722663
CUC 1.1421
CUP 30.265652
CVE 110.098235
CZK 24.162554
DJF 203.532601
DKK 7.474862
DOP 67.708924
DZD 152.145329
EGP 56.088654
ERN 17.131501
ETB 183.282196
FJD 2.55916
FKP 0.855378
GBP 0.856329
GEL 3.009446
GGP 0.855378
GHS 12.984049
GIP 0.855378
GMD 82.82724
GNF 10024.036075
GTQ 8.722788
GYD 239.083096
HKD 8.957063
HNL 30.592332
HRK 7.536145
HTG 149.49683
HUF 353.210477
IDR 20558.943323
ILS 3.434352
IMP 0.855378
INR 108.953377
IQD 1497.264876
IRR 1571472.588244
ISK 143.996042
JEP 0.855378
JMD 180.948593
JOD 0.809745
JPY 185.306306
KES 147.686675
KGS 99.874025
KHR 4577.187193
KMF 492.245363
KPW 1027.890461
KRW 1751.233471
KWD 0.354599
KYD 0.952578
KZT 540.523105
LAK 25808.585816
LBP 102352.807276
LKR 382.838497
LRD 207.440342
LSL 18.539405
LTL 3.372324
LVL 0.690845
LYD 7.325936
MAD 10.688744
MDL 20.104987
MGA 4845.68149
MKD 61.639861
MMK 2398.12993
MNT 4091.42228
MOP 9.233217
MRU 45.615904
MUR 53.75908
MVR 17.657117
MWK 1982.006544
MXN 19.960426
MYR 4.660457
MZN 72.991275
NAD 18.539324
NGN 1564.859826
NIO 42.057217
NOK 11.244375
NPR 174.224916
NZD 2.009942
OMR 0.439144
PAB 1.142994
PEN 3.889124
PGK 5.021504
PHP 70.270033
PKR 317.768369
PLN 4.289505
PYG 6949.504053
QAR 4.178171
RON 5.230364
RSD 117.371385
RUB 88.967237
RWF 1673.382552
SAR 4.292654
SBD 9.20366
SCR 16.633676
SDG 685.824136
SEK 11.042451
SGD 1.477266
SHP 0.852693
SLE 27.810602
SLL 23949.27156
SOS 653.256275
SRD 42.904157
STD 23639.165516
STN 24.463481
SVC 10.00107
SYP 126.238716
SZL 18.536005
THB 38.065954
TJS 10.594774
TMT 4.008771
TND 3.37329
TOP 2.749903
TRY 53.475415
TTD 7.746334
TWD 36.592545
TZS 3000.865602
UAH 50.904119
UGX 4171.77236
USD 1.1421
UYU 45.969163
UZS 13692.02101
VES 729.691469
VND 30037.802837
VUV 135.903032
WST 3.167257
XAF 655.01074
XAG 0.018393
XAU 0.000275
XCD 3.086582
XCG 2.059925
XDR 0.81457
XOF 654.967792
XPF 119.331742
YER 270.734961
ZAR 18.533829
ZMK 10280.270904
ZMW 21.001281
ZWL 367.755756
  • CMSD

    -0.0300

    22.15

    -0.14%

  • CMSC

    0.0400

    21.99

    +0.18%

  • RYCEF

    0.5400

    19.68

    +2.74%

  • RBGPF

    2.5400

    68.15

    +3.73%

  • NGG

    2.6700

    82.85

    +3.22%

  • GSK

    2.3600

    53.66

    +4.4%

  • BCE

    0.4000

    21.42

    +1.87%

  • AZN

    11.2900

    195.15

    +5.79%

  • RIO

    1.0700

    94.42

    +1.13%

  • VOD

    0.1400

    13.15

    +1.06%

  • BTI

    1.2100

    61.77

    +1.96%

  • BCC

    0.4500

    75.93

    +0.59%

  • RELX

    0.5500

    31.93

    +1.72%

  • JRI

    0.0600

    13

    +0.46%

  • BP

    1.2500

    37.4

    +3.34%

War, poverty, no internet: The trials of a C.Africa rapper
War, poverty, no internet: The trials of a C.Africa rapper / Photo: BARBARA DEBOUT - AFP

War, poverty, no internet: The trials of a C.Africa rapper

Clad in a fluorescent jumpsuit and high-top sneakers, Cool Fawa grabs the microphone and fires up the audience.

Text size:

The rapper and hip-hop singer launches confidently into her best-known song, "Valide" ("Validated"), and the swaying crowd sings to the chorus.

Her gig is a bar in Bangui, the capital of the Central African Republic -- arguably one of the toughest countries in the world for a female rapper to seek stardom.

In the music business, talent is drawn to mega-cities in wealthy countries and would-be stars use the internet to pitch their songs and videos.

By that metric, the CAR does not even register on the scale.

Remote and landlocked, the country has been torn by civil war for more than nine years.

Its people are among the poorest on the planet. Only 10 percent of the population of some five million have access to the internet.

- Radical rap -

Such problems do not deter Cool Fawa, meaning "Cool Girl".

A music professional since 2012 and aged 27 today, she has more than 4,500 followers on Instagram and notched up more than 50,000 views on YouTube for her 2018 hit "On va se marier" ("We're Gonna Get Married").

Such figures are of course tiny compared with the followings of Adele, Beyonce or Taylor Swift -- but in the context of the CAR, they amount to big recognition.

"I love her music. It gives me hope of succeeding one day," said a 16-year-old girl at the bar in Bangui.

"Cool Fawa, she rocks," exclaimed a young man.

Cool Fawa -- real name Princia Plisson -- sings mainly in the former colonial tongue French, with touches of national language Sango and English.

When she first envisaged a musical future in 2010, the CAR was devoid of local women stars.

"I was a fan of Diam's," said Cool Fawa, referring to a French rapper, Melanie Georgiades, who shot to fame with a debut album, "Brut de Femme", that ventured boldly into male territory.

Determined to follow suit, the teenager became the only woman in an all-male revolutionary rap group, MC Fonctionnaire, whose songs attacked poverty and inequality.

"At first they didn't take me seriously but they ended up accepting me," she said.

But, she said, "My music was frowned upon -- there were parents who no longer wanted their daughters to associate with me."

- Always hustle -

Within a couple of years, her fledgling career went up in smoke.

Civil war erupted along sectarian lines, triggered by the overthrow of president Francois Bozize by mainly Muslim rebels.

"We couldn't go out anymore, we were afraid of taking a bullet or being kidnapped," she said.

After violence de-escalated, Cool Fawa revived her career, focusing more on male-female relationships with a "zouk-love" rhythm -- a lyrical genre from distant Haiti that spread from the Caribbean.

"That's what sells," she said, with a touch of regret. "For most people in the CAR, rap is a music for losers."

Surviving means having to hustle, for money is a constant struggle.

She has received some support from her relatives, although she comes from a modest background, and has received some backing from the ministry of arts and culture.

"Sponsors too often try things on sexually," she said. "I quickly realised that I had to fund my music myself."

Cool Fawa has a small business that she manages with her sister.

"We buy wigs, shoes, bags... abroad to resell them here. This enables me to pay for the recording of my songs in (neighbouring) Cameroon." Her goal is to release her first album.

Cool Fawa earns a living from concerts, but not yet with revenue from songs and videos on YouTube, given the public's lack of access to the internet.

"People around me always comment negatively on what my daughter is doing," said her mother Cecile Yohoram, a high-school English teacher.

"But as soon as I hear her sing, I feel proud."

K.Pokorny--TPP