Los Angeles Times

Africa has felled statues for years

Tributes to colonial leaders have long been targeted as racist relics.

- Associated press

JOHANNESBU­RG, South Africa — Queen Victoria, Cecil Rhodes, King Leopold. Statues honoring these leaders of colonial rule have been pulled down over the years in Africa after countries won independen­ce or newer generation­s said racist relics had to go.

New campaigns in the United States and Europe are now following Africa’s lead. Monuments to slave traders and colonial rulers have become the focus of protests around the world, driven by a reexaminat­ion of historical injustice after the death of George Floyd at the hands of police in the U.S.

No protests have been spotted this week around the remaining statues in Africa, but several have faced furious demonstrat­ions in the past.

A boisterous student-led campaign pressed the University of Cape Town to remove a statue of Rhodes from the school’s entrance in April 2015. The statue had been defaced and covered in excrement by students protesting against the colonial leader who supported whiteminor­ity rule in South Africa and the colonizati­on of the southern African territorie­s named for him, Northern and Southern Rhodesia, which later became independen­t Zambia and Zimbabwe.

Students celebrated as a crane lifted the statue off its base. Now the statue is covered by a tarpaulin at an army base.

Another statue of Rhodes was toppled in Zimbabwe in July 1980, a few months after the country became independen­t. When the statue was downed in the capital — then known by its colonial name, Salisbury, now Harare — demonstrat­ors cheered and pounded it with a hammer.

A statue of Britain’s Queen Victoria in Nairobi, Kenya, was knocked down and beheaded in 2015 by unknown vandals. The headless statue lies next to its plinth in a downtown square.

“This statue reminds me of the suffering our forefather­s went through in the hands of colonialis­ts, and whenever we see them, the memories are fresh,” Nairobi resident Samuel Obiero said. “We need to get rid of them. All over the world they must be brought down, and all people who suffered due to colonialis­m need to also be saved from all these kinds of memories.”

In Congo, a statue honoring colonial ruler King Leopold II of Belgium — a copy of the statue that is now the focus of demonstrat­ions in Belgium — was pulled down decades ago. Erected in 1928, it was ordered taken down by then-dictator Mobutu Sese Seko seven years after independen­ce in 1960.

The statue returned in 2005 with an updated plaque, intended by authoritie­s to serve as a reminder of the horrors of colonial rule. Public outcry was so great that it was taken down a day later.

Now it stands in a park of colonial monuments on the grounds of the Institute of National Museums set up by the United Nations mission in Congo. Although the park is technicall­y open to the public, access is limited because of its proximity to the president’s residence in the capital, Kinshasa. The park also has statues of explorers Henry Morton Stanley and David Livingston­e.

There have been so many protests against the statue of Paul Kruger, an early white ruler of South Africa, in Pretoria that fencing has been erected to keep people away from it. “Killer Killer” is prominentl­y painted on its base.

“It just reminds me of, like, what’s written over there: ‘Killer Killer,’ ” said Rogue Wanga, a 19-year-old street vendor. “Those people were killers, literally. And they never liked us. I feel like we should replace it. Maybe a fountain or a Madiba [Nelson Mandela] statue wouldn’t hurt.”

A different view came from student Sambeso Soxa, 23.

“I think maybe maybe we could put, like, a statue of someone else next to it. You know, maybe [black rights activist] Steve Biko next to the statue, maybe above it to show that we’ve gone past now,” Soxa said.

“But I don’t think we should necessaril­y take it down ... because it’s a reminder of something that happened in the past and something we should avoid in future,” he said.

South African author William Gumede said taking down statues is just the first step in a process.

African countries must find ways to celebrate their own heroes, “not just politician­s but artists, social justice activists and many others,” said Gumede, who is also chairman of the Democracy Works Foundation, which promotes good governance in Africa.

“Pulling down statues of colonialis­ts is not enough,” he said. “We must put forward positive representa­tions of our history, representa­tions that instill pride in our identity.”

 ?? Schalk van Zuydam Associated Press ?? CHEERING STUDENTS surround a statue of British colonialis­t Cecil Rhodes as it is removed from the University of Cape Town in South Africa in April 2015.
Schalk van Zuydam Associated Press CHEERING STUDENTS surround a statue of British colonialis­t Cecil Rhodes as it is removed from the University of Cape Town in South Africa in April 2015.

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