King Leopold II pillaged DR Congo and treated the colony as his personal property (AFP Photo/SAMIR TOUNSI) |
Kinshasa (AFP) - DR Congo hailed Belgium on Tuesday after its monarch, King Philippe, voiced his "deepest regrets" for the country's brutal colonial occupation, but some in the country demanded reparations for the past.
In a letter
to President Felix Tshisekedi on the nation's 60th anniversary of independence,
Philippe expressed unprecedented sorrow for colonial acts that historians say
led to the death of millions of Congolese.
"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.
"Acts
of violence and cruelty were committed which weigh on our collective
memory," he said.
DR Congo
Foreign Minister Marie Ntumba Nzeza, in statement to AFP, said the king's
letter was "balm to the heart of the Congolese people. This is a step
forward that will boost friendly relations between our nations."
Tshisekedi,
in a TV address on the eve of the anniversary, paid tribute to Belgium, where
he lived in self-imposed exile before returning to run successfully in the 2018
elections.
Philippe,
he said, "is searching, just like me, to strengthen the ties between our
two countries, without denying our common past, but with the goal of preparing
a bright and harmonious future."
In
contrast, Lambert Mende, the former spokesman of Tshisekedi's predecessor,
Joseph Kabila, said, "It's not enough to say, 'I feel regret.'
"People
should be willing to repair the damage in terms of investment and compensation
with interest. That's what we expect from our Belgian partners."
Herve
Diakiese, spokesman of a citizen's movement called Congolais Debout (Congolese,
Stand Up), said the monarch's letter was "a step in the right
direction."
"But
this belated remorse can only be accepted after adequate reparations for these
atrocities which enabled the personal enrichment of Leopold II and his
friends," he said, referring to the former Belgian monarch who pillaged
Congo from 1885 to 1908.
"Belgium's
mischief-making after independence on June 30 1960 to control the DRC's
minerals should also feature among reparation issues," he said.
Looted
Congolese artefacts, too, should be returned, he added.
Jean-Claude
Katende, the president of Asadho, one of the oldest rights groups in the
Democratic Republic of Congo, called for a greater effort to identify provinces
where colonial Belgium carried out its worst atrocities.
"In
Equateur (province), people were killed and others had their hands cut
off," he said.
Belgium is
contemplating setting up a parliamentary commission to investigate its colonial
rule, which also extended over Rwanda and Burundi.
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