Belgian king returns mask to Congo in symbolic gesture of restitution
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[June 08, 2022]
By Benoit Nyemba
KINSHASA (Reuters) -Belgium's King Philippe
returned a traditional mask to Democratic Republic of Congo on Wednesday
on his first visit to the former colony, where many remain angry at
Belgium's failure to apologise for decades of brutal rule.
By some estimates, killings, famine and disease killed up to 10 million
Congolese during just the first 23 years of Belgium's rule from 1885 to
1960, after King Leopold II claimed the Congo Free State as his personal
fiefdom.
Villages that missed rubber collection quotas were notoriously made to
provide severed hands instead.
In 2020, Philippe became the first Belgian official to express regret
for the “suffering and humiliation” inflicted on Congo. But he stopped
short of issuing an apology, and some Congolese have demanded he does
during this first visit since taking the throne in 2013.
"They left us isolated, abandoned. They pillaged all our resources, and
today you invite the Belgian king again?" said Junior Bombi, a salesman
in Kinshasa's central market.
Antoine Roger Lokongo, a professor at the University of Joseph Kasa-Vubu
in southwestern Congo, said he would be waiting to see if Philippe
formally apologised for colonial-era crimes.
"The simple regret that you have expressed is not sufficient," Lokongo
said.
INITIATION MASK
Congo President Felix Tshisekedi and many other politicians have
enthusiastically welcomed the visit, as have some residents who hope it
will bring investment and a renewed focus on the conflict in the east of
the country.
"My feeling is that we should start having good Congolese-Belgium
relations again, like before," Kinshasa resident Antoine Mubidiki said.
"Despite what the Belgians did to us during colonisation, we are ready
to forgive."
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Belgium's King Philippe and Queen Mathilde arrive at the
international airport in Kinshasa, Democratic Republic of Congo,
June 7, 2022. REUTERS/ Justin Makangara
Philippe offered the initiation mask of the Suku
people to Congo's national museum as an "indefinite loan". The mask
has been held for decades by Belgium's Royal Museum for Central
Africa.
"I am here to return to you this exceptional work in order to allow
Congolese to discover and admire it," Philippe said, standing next
to Tshisekedi. "It marks the symbolic beginning of the reinforcement
of the cultural collaboration between Belgium and Congo."
The king arrived on Tuesday with his wife, Queen Mathilde, and Prime
Minister Alexander De Croo for a week-long visit that will also take
him to the eastern cities of Bukavu and Lubumbashi.
He is due to address a joint session of Congo's parliament later on
Wednesday.
Belgium has traditionally said little about colonialism, and the
subject has not been extensively taught in Belgian schools.
But there have been the beginnings of a historical reckoning in
recent years. During anti-racism protests sparked in 2020 by the
police killing in the United States of George Floyd, demonstrators
targeted statues of King Leopold II.
Belgium's parliament established a commission soon after to examine
the historical record. A preliminary report published last year
called for a more accurate understanding of the colonial period, and
the final report is expected this year.
(Reporting by Benoit Nyemba and Nellie Peyton; Writing by Aaron
Ross; Editing by Alison Williams)
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