Marcus Rashford mural messages of support to be preserved
- Published
Messages of support and solidarity left on the mural of footballer Marcus Rashford will be preserved.
Hundreds of heartfelt notes were placed on the artwork in Withington, Manchester, which was defaced following England's Euro 2020 final defeat.
The street artist Akse, who created the portrait, has now repaired the damage.
Ed Wellard, who commissioned the mural, said a final decision had yet to be made but the notes would be "retained, recorded and if possible displayed".
Mr Wellard, who is the co-founder of Withington Walls, added that "there is a lot of cultural capital there".
The artwork was defaced with several swear words shortly after Rashford missed a penalty, along with Jadon Sancho and Bukayo Saka, in the 3-2 shootout loss on Sunday.
Greater Manchester Police launched an investigation after it received a report of racially aggravated damage at the site at 02:50 BST on Monday.
All three players have also been targeted with racist abuse on social media following the match.
A 37-year-old man has been arrested on suspicion of an offence under the Malicious Communications Act, police confirmed.
The suspect, from Ashton-Upon-Mersey in Trafford, was being questioned after self-presenting at Cheadle Heath police station.
Det Insp Matt Gregory said: "The actions of a small number of people overshadowed what was a hugely unifying event for our country on Sunday evening.
"We are firm in our commitment, any racist abuse whether online or off is not acceptable."
Rashford said he was sorry for missing his penalty, adding that he "wished it had gone differently", and paid tribute to those who added messages to the mural.
The Manchester United forward also said he was "lost for words" as hundreds of people also gathered for an anti-racism demonstration at the mural on Tuesday evening.
People took the knee at the Stand Up to Racism demo and several speakers addressed the 700-strong crowd.