Bangkok Post

Remains of independen­ce hero Lumumba returned

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KINSHASA: The coffin of slain Congolese independen­ce hero Patrice Lumumba returned to his homeland yesterday for an emotionall­y charged tour and burial, more than six decades after his assassinat­ion.

A plane took Lumumba’s last remains — a tooth that ex-colonial power Belgium handed over to his family on Monday — from Brussels to Kinshasa for a nine-day trip around the Democratic Republic of Congo.

The coffin and an accompanyi­ng delegation will then fly to the central province of Sankuru, where the country’s first post-independen­ce leader was born in the village of Onalua in 1925.

The remains will visit sites symbolical­ly important to Lumumba’s life and be laid to rest in a mausoleum in the capital Kinshasa on June 30, following three days of national mourning.

“His spirit, which was imprisoned in Belgium, comes back here,” said Onalua Maurice Tasombo Omatuku, a traditiona­l chief and nephew of Lumumba.

Finally able to mourn his uncle but knowing he was assassinat­ed in 1961, Omatuku said he was feeling emotionall­y torn.

Mr Onalua, which since 2013 has been part of a commune named Lumumbavil­le in honour of the anticoloni­al leader, was on Tuesday preparing to welcome back its favourite son.

Braving the oppressive heat, men cleared sand, tree branches and grass from the road leading to the neighbouri­ng town of Tshumbe under police supervisio­n.

Palm leaves, used as a symbol of mourning or celebratio­n, were being installed by the roadside next to Congolese flags.

A podium in the national colours of yellow, blue and red, tents and banners bearing Lumumba’s face were erected in the village square where the coffin was set to arrive.

A local resident pointed to a large, unfinished concrete house falling into dilapidati­on, with much of its roof missing.

“That’s the family plot where Lumumba was born,” he said. Catherine Mbutshu said she felt joy at the idea that Lumumba’s “relic” were finally returning to the land of his forefather­s.

“I’m old, my legs hurt, but I’m happy because the son is returning,” said the woman believed to have once known Lumumba.

“I spoke with him before his departure for Kisangani,” his political bastion in northeaste­rn Congo, she said.

Lumumba earned his place in history as an anti-colonial icon when the DRC proclaimed independen­ce from Belgium on June 30, 1960, delivering a fiery speech against settler racism.

He was overthrown that September before separatist­s from the southern region of Katanga and Belgian mercenarie­s executed him and two close supporters, Maurice Mpolo and Joseph Okito, on Jan 17, 1961.

Lumumba’s body was dissolved in acid and never recovered.

Decades passed before human remains were discovered in Belgium, after a Belgian police officer who took part in Lumumba’s death boasted about his actions in the media.

 ?? ?? Lumumba: To be interred in Kinshasa
Lumumba: To be interred in Kinshasa

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