Valete, a Portuguese rapper of Santomean origin currently living in Lisbon, has faced many criticisms after releasing a video that shows a scene of domestic violence.
The music video for “B.F.F”, released on August 30, shows an armed man violently threatening his partner and her lover. On Valete's YouTube channel, the video has over a million viDozens of women's rights associations in Portugal signed an open letter to Valete criticising what they said was a trivialisation of domestic violence. The letter says:
According to the Portuguese Association for Victim Support (APAV), which provides support to families of victims of violence in Portugal, of 28 cases of attempted murder in 2018, 11 were committed by the victim's partner or former partner.
Facing criticism, Valete published a video reply rebuffing his critics, who he calls “bourgeois feminists who do not go to Lisbon’s suburbs to get to know the lives of the women who live there.”
To the newspaper Público, Valete called the controversy “empty,” created by “a small group of popstar feminists,” and claims his artistic freedom as a creator. “If I showed the same thing in a book or a film, there would be no problem.”
Valete is the artistic name of Keidje Torres Lima, 37 years old. He started his musical career in 1997, having released two albums and made several appearances in albums of other lusophone hip-hop artists.
The controversy provoked reactions from women on social media. On her Facebook page, the Portuguese activist Marta Sousa e Silva criticized the video, and also showed support for the musician’s artistic freedom:
Other reactions came from Mozambique, one of them from Capito Semente, who said he did not see anything controversial in the video:
The Mozambican researcher Boa Monjane, who says he supports feminism, says he is in solidarity with Valete because although he was shocked by the video, he thinks that there is a racist exploitation of the case:
I assume the consequences!!ews.
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