The Star Malaysia

Belgian king regrets colonial past in Congo

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Belgium’s King Philippe has expressed deep regret for the “suffering and humiliatio­n” inflicted on the Democratic Republic of Congo during its 75 years under Belgian rule.

Philippe’s message in a letter to Congo President Felix Tshisekedi on Tuesday was the first such expression of regret for Belgium’s colonial past by a reigning monarch, the royal palace said, although it stopped short of formally apologisin­g.

“I want to express my deepest regret for these past injuries, the pain of which is regularly revived by the discrimina­tion that is still all too present in our societies,” said the letter, released to mark the 60th anniversar­y of Congo’s independen­ce.

“This warms the hearts of the Congolese people,” said Congolese Foreign Minister Marie Tumba.

“Through King Philippe, Belgium has laid the foundation of a profound change.”

Congolese activists and academics said Philippe’s message was welcome, although some said it did not go far enough.

“The king as well as Belgium should go further than a simple declaratio­n,” said Jean-Claude Mputu, a Congolese political scientist at the University of Liege.

He called for “strong symbolic means to mark a new beginning” such as the restitutio­n of Congolese works of art.

Belgium has struggled to come to terms with its colonial history – “a past marked with inequality and violence towards the Congolese”, Belgian Prime Minister Sophie Wilmes said.

Congo achieved independen­ce in 1960 after 52 years as a Belgian colony. Millions of Congolese are estimated to have died between 1885 and 1908 after King Leopold II declared it his personal property.

During Leopold’s rule acts of cruelty were committed, while the later colonial period “caused suffering and humiliatio­n”, Philippe said.

Statues of Leopold, whose troops killed and maimed millions of Congolese, have been defaced or removed in Belgium after global anti-racism protests sparked by the police killing of Black American George Floyd swept across Europe.

Philippe pledged to “continue to fight every form of racism” and welcomed the Belgian parliament’s move to launch a reconcilia­tion commission to address racism and the country’s colonial past. — Reuters

 ?? — AFP ?? Splashes of anger: A worker removing a vandalised statue of Leopold in Ghent, Belgium. It was defaced amid talks to remove all statues of the king due to his misdeeds towards Congo.
— AFP Splashes of anger: A worker removing a vandalised statue of Leopold in Ghent, Belgium. It was defaced amid talks to remove all statues of the king due to his misdeeds towards Congo.

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