Banksy takes street-art swipe at France on migrant crisis
The street artist Banksy has taken a swipe at French authorities for their handling of the migrant crisis in Calais, placing a drawing of the child featured on posters for the musical Les Misérables surrounded by tear gas.
Elusive street artist leaves scathing piece opposite French embassy in London
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The street artist Banksy has taken a swipe at French authorities for their handling of the migrant crisis in Calais, placing a drawing of the child featured on posters for the musical Les Misérables surrounded by tear gas.
The elusive street artist placed the mural near the French Embassy in London.
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His publicist, Jo Brooks, confirmed Monday that the work was genuine.
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The work contains an interactive image that links to a video that shows police using tear gas in a Calais raid.
It's not the street artist's first criticism of France. Last month, he tried to underscore the potential of migrants by depicting the late Steve Jobs — whose biological father was from Syria — carrying a black garbage bag and an early model of the Macintosh computer.
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