The Prague Post - Belgium returns Lumumba tooth to family

EUR -
AED 4.303371
AFN 79.991365
ALL 97.154291
AMD 446.422073
ANG 2.097237
AOA 1074.525283
ARS 1599.477072
AUD 1.784351
AWG 2.112139
AZN 1.982649
BAM 1.956297
BBD 2.355399
BDT 142.326192
BGN 1.956323
BHD 0.441801
BIF 3489.172366
BMD 1.171783
BND 1.504676
BOB 8.075781
BRL 6.340757
BSD 1.169492
BTN 103.153887
BWP 15.723065
BYN 3.951705
BYR 22966.946217
BZD 2.352008
CAD 1.620493
CDF 3368.876255
CHF 0.933975
CLF 0.02889
CLP 1133.360475
CNY 8.358152
CNH 8.355404
COP 4649.916054
CRC 592.558266
CUC 1.171783
CUP 31.052249
CVE 110.22107
CZK 24.397693
DJF 208.252067
DKK 7.466326
DOP 73.959754
DZD 152.1728
EGP 56.803938
ERN 17.576745
ETB 167.289781
FJD 2.63979
FKP 0.867682
GBP 0.867963
GEL 3.16207
GGP 0.867682
GHS 14.141364
GIP 0.867682
GMD 83.758301
GNF 10136.620873
GTQ 8.963428
GYD 244.512546
HKD 9.134248
HNL 30.640184
HRK 7.535151
HTG 152.84952
HUF 393.082216
IDR 19170.720928
ILS 3.912824
IMP 0.867682
INR 103.230332
IQD 1532.089592
IRR 49302.767998
ISK 143.00429
JEP 0.867682
JMD 187.12998
JOD 0.830773
JPY 173.524632
KES 151.323626
KGS 102.473076
KHR 4689.132364
KMF 492.731013
KPW 1054.554975
KRW 1629.117904
KWD 0.357329
KYD 0.974548
KZT 628.489817
LAK 25372.451908
LBP 104725.130333
LKR 353.119794
LRD 234.326606
LSL 20.673757
LTL 3.45997
LVL 0.7088
LYD 6.348587
MAD 10.621367
MDL 19.628991
MGA 5201.344833
MKD 61.541721
MMK 2460.503401
MNT 4213.326804
MOP 9.39889
MRU 46.884522
MUR 53.984132
MVR 18.056667
MWK 2027.824304
MXN 21.948608
MYR 4.946112
MZN 74.879671
NAD 20.673757
NGN 1784.250596
NIO 43.040761
NOK 11.738541
NPR 165.156111
NZD 1.98428
OMR 0.450553
PAB 1.168734
PEN 4.119348
PGK 4.881283
PHP 66.607074
PKR 331.85037
PLN 4.251346
PYG 8429.143429
QAR 4.271597
RON 5.074755
RSD 117.185358
RUB 95.162723
RWF 1693.930746
SAR 4.396768
SBD 9.636536
SCR 17.32678
SDG 703.657854
SEK 10.991518
SGD 1.505442
SHP 0.920837
SLE 27.244202
SLL 24571.700616
SOS 668.378516
SRD 45.555994
STD 24253.541663
STN 24.506441
SVC 10.232602
SYP 15235.639113
SZL 20.667167
THB 37.496551
TJS 11.044198
TMT 4.112958
TND 3.417838
TOP 2.744427
TRY 48.352568
TTD 7.937018
TWD 35.728247
TZS 2931.475208
UAH 48.206764
UGX 4111.361362
USD 1.171783
UYU 46.821339
UZS 14544.698541
VES 178.849902
VND 30942.687003
VUV 140.800962
WST 3.25222
XAF 656.126645
XAG 0.028693
XAU 0.000326
XCD 3.166802
XCG 2.107636
XDR 0.816011
XOF 656.121044
XPF 119.331742
YER 281.346645
ZAR 20.617966
ZMK 10547.461366
ZMW 27.921219
ZWL 377.313638
  • RBGPF

    3.9500

    75.43

    +5.24%

  • CMSC

    0.2900

    24.23

    +1.2%

  • RIO

    1.5100

    63.97

    +2.36%

  • BTI

    0.5900

    56.02

    +1.05%

  • AZN

    -0.0800

    81.7

    -0.1%

  • RYCEF

    0.0200

    14.61

    +0.14%

  • GSK

    0.8900

    40.5

    +2.2%

  • BP

    -0.3700

    33.93

    -1.09%

  • RELX

    0.2500

    47.05

    +0.53%

  • NGG

    1.1800

    70.1

    +1.68%

  • VOD

    0.0600

    11.81

    +0.51%

  • JRI

    0.0500

    13.62

    +0.37%

  • BCC

    2.7900

    90.02

    +3.1%

  • SCS

    0.0900

    17.14

    +0.53%

  • CMSD

    0.5000

    24.46

    +2.04%

  • BCE

    0.2500

    24.72

    +1.01%

Belgium returns Lumumba tooth to family
Belgium returns Lumumba tooth to family / Photo: © AFP

Belgium returns Lumumba tooth to family

Belgium on Monday handed over the last remains of slain Congolese leader Patrice Lumumba -- a tooth -- to his family, turning a page on a grim chapter in its colonial past.

Text size:

Chief prosecutor Frederic Van Leeuw gave the relatives a small, bright blue box containing the tooth in a televised ceremony, and said legal action they had taken to receive the relic had delivered "justice".

The tooth was placed in a casket that was then draped in the flag of the Democratic Republic of Congo, which celebrates Lumumba, who was murdered by separatists and Belgian mercenaries in 1961, as an anti-colonial hero.

Lumumba's assassination -- and the brutal history of Belgian control of the Congo -- have been enduring sources of pain between the two countries.

Belgian Prime Minister Alexander De Croo reiterated that his country's authorities bore a "moral responsibility" over the killing.

"I would like, in the presence of his family, to present in my turn the apologies of the Belgian government," he said.

"A man was murdered for his political convictions, his words, his ideals."

Lumumba's son Francois told Belgium's RTBF broadcaster that his relatives had been waiting "more than 60 years" for this event.

"I think it will provide solace for the family and the Congolese people," he said.

"We are opening a new page in history."

A fiery critic of Belgium's rapacious rule, Lumumba became his country's first prime minister after it gained independence in 1960.

But he fell out with the former colonial power and the United States and was ousted in a coup a few months after taking office.

He was executed on January 17 1961, aged just 35, in the southern region of Katanga, with the support of Belgian mercenaries.

His body was dissolved in acid and never found.

But the tooth was kept as a trophy by one of those involved, a Belgian police officer.

The tooth was seized by Belgian authorities in 2016 from the daughter of the policeman, Gerard Soete, after Lumumba's family filed a complaint.

- 'National mourning' -

The casket containing the tooth is set to be flown back to the DRC where it will be officially laid to rest at a memorial site.

The country is set to hold three days of "national mourning" from 27 to 30 June -- its 62nd anniversary of independence -- to mark the burial ceremony.

Lumumba's older son Francois filed a complaint in Belgium in 2011, pointing the finger of responsibility for his father's killing at a dozen Belgian officials and diplomats.

The investigation for "war crimes" is still ongoing but only two of the targeted officials are still alive.

A Belgian parliamentary commission of enquiry in 2001 concluded that Belgium had "moral responsibility" for the assassination and the government presented the country's "apologies" a year later.

De Croo said Belgian officials "chose not to see, chose not to act" to stop the killing, even if they had not directly intended it to happen.

Lumumba's children were also received Monday by Belgium's King Philippe, who this month travelled to DR Congo to express his "deepest regrets" over the colonial past.

Historians say that millions of people were killed, mutilated or died of disease as they were forced to collect rubber under Belgian rule. The land was also pillaged for its mineral wealth, timber and ivory.

T.Musil--TPP