Daily Dispatch

Belgian king has ‘deepest regrets’ over DRC’s colonial past

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Belgium’s King Philippe expressed his “deepest regrets” for the harm done during Belgian colonial rule in DR Congo, in a first for his country.

Philippe, who has reigned since 2013, made his remarks in a letter to the president of the DRC, Felix Tshisekedi, on the 60th anniversar­y of Congo’s independen­ce on June 30, 1960.

The death of African American George Floyd in May as he was being arrested by police in the US city of Minneapoli­s has stoked fresh debate in Belgium over its colonial record.

“I want to express my deepest regrets for these wounds of the past whose pain is reawakened today by the discrimina­tion still present in our societies,” Philippe said.

Historians say that millions of Africans from areas in what is now the DRC were killed, mutilated or died of disease as they worked on rubber plantation­s belonging to Belgium’s King Leopold II.

Philippe, without mentioning Leopold by name, said that during this period “acts of violence and cruelty were committed which weigh on our collective memory”.

“The colonial period which followed (1908-60) also caused suffering and humiliatio­n.” Philippe said he would combat all forms of racism and said he wanted to encourage the reflection on the issue begun by the Belgian parliament so such memories could be put to rest.

Several statues of Leopold , who ruled between 1865 and 1909, have been daubed with paint or torn down by protesters in Belgium in recent weeks, and a petition has been launched for their removal. On Tuesday, the city of Ghent was to mark the 60th anniversar­y of Congolese independen­ce by removing a statue of Leopold.

The French-speaking daily Le Soir welcomed the royal interventi­on in an editorial: “Finally, this gesture, so necessary, which lifts the King and his country.”

Through concession companies, Leopold II used forced labour to extract rubber in Congo, among other things.

Harsh treatment — up to the cutting off of hands for unproducti­ve workers — has been documented.

According to most historians, the violence did not stop after Leopold II, and a regime of strict separation of blacks and whites, comparable to the apartheid of SA, was maintained for decades.

“We have heard of the famous ‘benefits of civilisati­on’ brought by the Belgians,” Romain Landmeters, a researcher at the University Saint-Louis in Brussels, said.

“But between the roads, hospitals, schools, we know that everything that was built was essentiall­y intended to serve this system of extraction and production of wealth for the settlers,” he said. —

 ??  ?? PHILIPPE OF BELGIUM
PHILIPPE OF BELGIUM

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