Los Angeles Times

Belgian king issues regrets

He apologizes to Congolese lawmakers for abuses committed during colonial rule.

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KINSHASA, Congo — Belgium’s King Philippe expressed his “deepest regrets” for his nation’s abuses in its former colony Congo, telling lawmakers Wednesday on his first official trip to the country that Belgian colonial rule was unjustifia­ble and racist.

“Although many Belgians were sincerely committed to loving the Congo and its people deeply, the colonial regime, as such, was based on exploitati­on and domination,” the king told the national legislatur­e in Kinshasa, the capital.

“This regime was that of an unequal relationsh­ip, in itself unjustifia­ble, marked by paternalis­m, discrimina­tion and racism,” he said.

“On the occasion of my first trip to the Congo, right here in front of the Congolese people ... I wish to reaffirm my deepest regrets for these past wounds,” Philippe said, emphasizin­g the theme of his six-day visit to the country formerly known as Zaire.

His speech comes two years after the king made similar comments on the 60th anniversar­y of Congo’s independen­ce when he went further than any of his predecesso­rs in condemning “acts of violence and cruelty” during Belgian colonial rule.

While some in the Democratic Republic of Congo praised the Belgian king’s remarks as brave, others said the apology must come with financial reparation­s.

“Belgium must ask for forgivenes­s from the Congolese people but also compensate them,” said Francis Kambale, a 26-year-old student living in Goma in the country’s east. “Our grandparen­ts were beaten like animals, others were killed. But also many minerals and cultural goods were stolen by Belgium. This visit by the Belgian king is a distractio­n. Congo does not benefit in any way, nor does it improve the economic conditions of the Congolese.”

Belgium has faced a reckoning over its colonial past in recent years, particular­ly around Congo’s 60th anniversar­y of independen­ce in 2020. That year Belgium took down a statue in Ghent of King Leopold II, who had plundered Congo during his 1865-1909 reign and forced many of its people into slavery to extract resources for his own profit.

The early years after Leopold laid claim to the African country are especially infamous for killings, forced labor and other forms of brutality that some experts estimate left as many as 10 million Congolese dead, according to historians.

After Leopold’s claimed ownership of Congo ended in 1908, he handed it over to the Belgian state, which continued to rule the colony until the African nation became independen­t in 1960.

On Wednesday, Philippe also bestowed a top honor on the last known surviving Congolese veteran of World War II.

Former Cpl. Albert Kunyuku, now 100, was decorated Commander of the Order of the Crown. Enlisted at 18, Kunyuku had fought in Burma, now also known as Myanmar, on behalf of Belgium.

 ?? Thanassis Stavrakis KING PHILIPPE AP ?? apologized to Congolese for “these past wounds.”
Thanassis Stavrakis KING PHILIPPE AP apologized to Congolese for “these past wounds.”

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