
Belgian prosecutor seeks to try ex-diplomat over Congolese hero's killing
His body was dissolved in acid, but a gold-crowned tooth remained. It was handed over to Lumumba's family by the Belgian authorities in 2022.How the Congolese hero's golden tooth ended up in BelgiumA Belgian parliamentary commission of enquiry concluded in 2001 that Belgium bore "moral responsibility" for the assassination, and the government issued an apology a year later to Lumumba's family and the Congolese nation. Davignon is the sole survivor among 10 Belgians accused of complicity in Lumumba's murder, according to AFP news agency. He was a trainee diplomat at the time of the assassination, and served as the vice-chairman of the European Commission in the 1980s.A magistrate would decide if he should be put on trial, with a hearing set for January 2026. Lumumba's daughter, Juliana, welcomed the development, telling Belgian broadcaster RTBF: "We're moving in the right direction. What we're seeking is, first and foremost, the truth."Lumumba became prime minister at the time of Congo's independence in 1960, but the nation plunged into turmoil soon thereafter. He was later dismissed from the post, and executed by a firing squad, with both Belgium and the US accused of being complicit in his killing. His body was then buried in a shallow grave, dug up, transported 200km (125 miles), interred again, exhumed and then hacked to pieces and finally dissolved in acid.Belgian police commissioner Gerard Soete, who oversaw and participated in the destruction of the remains, took the gold-crowned tooth. He later admitted this, and talked about a second tooth and two of the corpse's fingers, but these have not been found.Lumumba's journey from prime minister to victim of assassination took less than seven months.Shortly after independence, the country was hit by a secessionist crisis as the mineral-rich south-eastern Katanga province declared that it was splitting off from the rest of the country.In the political chaos that followed, Belgian troops were sent in on the grounds that they would protect Belgian nationals, but they also helped support the Katangan administration, which was seen as more sympathetic.Lumumba himself was dismissed as prime minster by the president and just over a week later army chief of staff Col Joseph Mobutu seized power.Lumumba was then placed under house arrest, escaped and re-arrested in December 1960, before being held in the west of the country.His presence there was seen as a possible source of instability and the Belgian government encouraged his transfer to Katanga.During the flight there on 16 January 1961 he was assaulted. He was also beaten on arrival as the Katangan leaders pondered what to do with him.Eventually it was decided that he would face a firing squad, and on 17 January he was shot, along with two allies.
You may also be interested in:
'Our colonial regime was racist'MI6 and the death of Patrice LumumbaBelgium 'wakes up' to its bloody colonial past
Go to BBCAfrica.com for more news from the African continent.Follow us on Twitter @BBCAfrica, on Facebook at BBC Africa or on Instagram at bbcafrica
Hashtags

Try Our AI Features
Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:
Comments
No comments yet...
Related Articles


The Guardian
2 hours ago
- The Guardian
Why the US is burning $10m worth of birth control
There are few better metaphors for the receding status of American women than one offered up by the Trump administration at a medical waste disposal facility outside Paris this week: rather than distribute nearly $10m worth of birth control, which had been purchased by USAID and was destined to be given to women in low-income countries, primarily in Africa, the Americans decided to burn it. The incinerated contraceptives included 900,000 birth control implants, 2m doses of injectable long-acting birth control, 2m packs of contraceptive pills and 50,000 IUDs. The medicine is just the latest in the far-reaching fallout from cuts made by the so-called 'department of government efficiency,' or Doge, a project in which Elon Musk and a group of his very young, overwhelmingly male acolytes unilaterally slashed congressionally appropriated funding to government programs they did not like. The cuts have been devastating for non-profits that work to improve women's health and safety worldwide. Sarah Shaw, an associate director at the global family planning group MSI Reproductive Choices, says that the cuts will put women at risk as they strain their health with unplanned pregnancies and seek out illegal abortions; other women who are denied access to birth control will lose out on the opportunities for education, professional development or remunerative work that can help them escape abuse, rise out of poverty, pursue their talents and ambitions and better provide for the children they already have. When MSI attempted to buy the contraceptives, the administration would only accept full price, which the organization couldn't afford, she said. Several non-profits, including MSI, had offered to pay to ship and repackage the supplies, according to another representative. But the Trump administration refused, partially due to federal rules the prohibit the US from providing such goods to groups that perform, provide referrals for or offer education about abortions. In addition to the cost of purchasing the contraceptives, American taxpayers will now be on the hook for about $167,000 for the cost of burning them. It's just the latest in a series of signs that the Trump administration is turning against the provision of birth control, particularly the safe, effective and woman-controlled hormonal methods that have been a cornerstone of healthcare policy for decades and which were a precondition of women's advancement in work and education over the past 60 years. In April, the Trump administration abruptly announced that it was suspending a large swath of the domestic service grants distributed under Title X, the program meant to help low-income Americans access birth control, STD treatment and other sexual and reproductive healthcare. Of the 86 Title X grants awarded for fiscal year 2024, nearly 25% were 'temporarily withheld', mostly based on highly suspect allegations that the grant-receiving institutions – including 13 Planned Parenthood affiliates – had failed to comply with Trump executive orders banning things like DEI programs. Eight states now receive zero Title X dollars: California, Hawaii, Maine, Missouri, Mississippi, Montana, Tennessee and Utah. Alaska, Minnesota and Pennsylvania have also lost most of their contraception funding. The domestic cuts – along with the exclusion of Planned Parenthood clinics from Medicaid reimbursements – mean that American women, too, are now facing dramatically greater obstacles to accessing birth control. Clinics that relied on Title X funding are now set to close: 11 Planned Parenthood clinics already have, including in Democratically controlled states like California. Planned Parenthood says that cumulatively, the cuts could lead the organization to close about 200 of its 600 clinics nationwide – a devastating cut to abortion providers in particular that will make a wide range of reproductive services inaccessible to women regardless of where they live. But the Trump administration is not merely forcing these programs for women's health and dignity go up in flames. They are redirecting them to better suit their preferred cultural outcome: one in which women's lives, ambitions and talents are all subordinated to the task of childbearing. The New York Times reported last month that the White House is redirecting Title X funds that once went to birth control to instead fund an 'infertility training center' and programs in something called 'restorative reproductive medicine'. If Title X's original aim was to help American women control their fertility so as to build healthier families and to enable them to pursue other aims – like learning or work – in the new administration's version, the program exists mainly to encourage women to have more children. But the switch should not be seen as a genuine investment in infertility, an often devastating condition with which many Americans struggle. Because the new Title X priorities do not, by and large, direct more money to IVF. Trump promised, on the campaign trail, to make IVF free. But the procedure, which has opponents on the Christian right, is not included in the administration's new priority of 'restorative' reproductive medicine, a practice that avoids controversial fertility treatments; instead, doctors seek the 'root cause' of a woman's infertility, which may involve telling them they can conceive with proper diet and exercise. In government, money allocation is a statement of values. With its dramatic cuts to contraceptive funding at home and abroad, the Trump administration is making its values clear. It does not value women's health; it does not value their dignity, their control over their own lives, their aspirations, their earning potential, their desire to be freed from ignorance, or poverty, or the abuse they suffer under the hands of husbands and fathers. It does not value their ability to control their own bodies, and by extension, it does not value their ability to enter the public sphere. It does not value their dreams, their gifts, their hard work or invention or aspiration to anything other than making babies. American women, like women everywhere, depend on birth control to live lives of freedom and to pursue their dreams. But because of the Trump administration, those dreams are going up in smoke. Moira Donegan is a Guardian US columnist


Daily Mail
3 hours ago
- Daily Mail
Mom of woman, 19, murdered on first date issues jaw-dropping courtroom threat to arrogant killer as he's jailed for life
The heartbroken mother of a 19-year-old woman who was murdered on a first date told her daughter's killer during his sentencing that she will haunt him for eternity. 'You and your family will be held fully responsible for the rest of your lives,' Sheena Scarborough told Maxwell Anderson on Friday as he was sentenced to life in prison for the murder of Sade Robinson. 'You will be eternally haunted by myself, my ancestors... I know you can't sleep at night, they have already been at you.' Anderson, 34, was convicted in June of killing and dismembering college student Robinson during their first date last year in Milwaukee. Prosecutors said he cut up Robinson's body and dumped one of her legs near a playground. Parts of her body, including her head, were never found. 'Judge, I'm asking this demon be respectfully returned back to hell as soon as possible,' Scarborough added. Robinson's father, Carlos Robinson, suggested to the judge that someone dismember Anderson. 'Everything that he did should be done to him,' he said. 'No man should be able to live after what he did. That's just how I feel. I can't get past this. I can't.' Anderson maintained his innocence throughout the trial and the sentencing. 'I took this to trial without ever once trying to make a plea deal of any kind because I did not commit these crimes,' Anderson said on Friday. 'And so I plan to appeal my convictions, while I hope and pray that further investigations not only prove my innocence but find and deliver true justice.' Anderson and Robinson, a student at Milwaukee Area Technical College, first met at a bar in March 2024 a week before her death. Police said they then spent the late afternoon and early evening of April 1 drinking at two bars before heading back to Anderson's apartment. Photos on Anderson's phone showed Anderson groping Robinson as she lay face down on his couch. Prosecutors have argued she was incapacitated and couldn't resist. Surveillance video showed her car leaving his apartment early on the morning of April 2 and arriving at a park along the Lake Michigan shoreline. Prosecutors claimed that's where he cut her body into pieces. He later burned her car behind an abandoned building and took a bus home. Searchers discovered one of Robinson's legs in the park and her other leg and a foot near a playground close to where he burned the car. Within the car, despite 'extreme fire damage,' investigators identified the outfit Robinson had been wearing on the night of the date as well as part of an iPhone consistent with hers. A human torso and an arm believed to be Robinson's remains washed up on a beach in suburban South Milwaukee. Her head is still missing. First-degree intentional homicide in Wisconsin carries a mandatory life sentence. The only question for Anderson on Friday was whether the judge would allow him to seek parole. Anderson's attorney, Tony Cotton, asked the judge to make Anderson eligible for parole after 25 years. He argued that Anderson served in the US Navy and suffers from obvious mental health issues. Cotton acknowledged that Anderson has been convicted of multiple misdemeanor disorderly conduct counts in connection with domestic violence but they're not significant offenses compared to most homicide defendants. He added that he has concerns about Anderson's safety in prison. But judge Laura Crivello refused to offer Anderson a chance at parole. She dismissed Anderson's claims of innocence, saying his view of reality 'differs from the rest of the world.' Trailing off at times and shaking her head, she said he's irredeemable, called his crimes 'unconscionable' and likened the case to something out of a horror novel. As previously reported, before the gruesome murder, Anderson and Robinson watched the Netflix series Love, Death & Robots. The animated show's Season 2 finale, 'The Drowned Giant,' depicts the gruesome dismantling of a gigantic human body on a beach.


BBC News
3 hours ago
- BBC News
Road rage driver jailed for killing moped rider near Esher
A man has been jailed for 13 years for killing a father of seven by deliberately driving his car into his Sullingston, from Orpington, was found guilty of manslaughter following a road rage incident involving Wayne Wigley on the morning of 1 July last Police said Sullingston was driving to work along the A244 towards Esher when Mr Wigley drove up behind and threw a stone at his car, causing the rear window to shatter. The 53-year-old pursued Mr Wigley and drove straight into the rear of the moped, making no attempt to brake or swerve, before Mr Wigley was thrown from his moped, losing his right leg and suffering "catastrophic" internal injuries. Sullingston had previously reported Mr Wigley over two road rage incidents involving the pair in May and June of 2024, the force added. Det Ch Ins Natalie Pearce, called Sullingston's actions "inexcusable and unforgivable". She said she hoped his sentence had "brought to justice for the loss of another man's life".Mr Wigley was pronounced dead at the scene, despite the efforts of several members of the public, including an off-duty police officer, before emergency services arrived. "Wayne is dearly missed by his seven children, his mum, dad, partner, sister and all his friends," said his was a "keen fisherman, skilled banger racer and gifted car mechanic", they added."He was well loved by all and would do anything for anyone."The family thanked family and friends for their support, which they said had helped them through the "horror" of what happened.