- home
- article
- Belgian court rules that country committed crimes against humanity during colonial rule in Congo
Belgian court rules that country committed crimes against humanity during colonial rule in Congo
ai generated text
A court in Belgium has ruled that the state is guilty of crimes against humanity for the forced removal of five mixed-race children from their families in the Belgian Congo during the colonial era. The women, now in their 70s, were taken from their parents at ages as young as 2 and sent to religious schools, where they suffered from poverty, malnutrition, and physical abuse. The state has been ordered to pay millions of dollars in compensation, setting a historic precedent for state-sanctioned abductions. The victims and their lawyers view the ruling as a victory and a major step towards justice for the thousands of children who were forcibly taken from their families in Belgium's African colonies.
If they are fighting for this crime to be recognised, it is for their children, their grandchildren… We ask you to name the crime and to condemn the Belgian State.
Today, we are witnessing the first substantiated condemnation of a State for crimes against humanity committed during colonization.
It is the first time in Belgium and probably in Europe that a court has condemned the Belgian colonial state for crimes against humanity.
There is no doubt for the court that the appellants have experienced great suffering since, and as a result of, their kidnapping before the age of 7 by the state.
This decision says that we have a certain value in the world. We are recognised.
When this kind of love is taken away from children, they're going to carry that scar for the rest of their lives.
The judges have recognised that this was a crime against humanity.
I am very happy that justice has finally been delivered to us.
sources
- 1.Al Jazeera
- 2.The Guardian
- 3.The New York Times
- 4.The Times of India
- 5.DW News
- 6.Le Monde
- 7.Agence France-Presse
- 8.Guardian
- 9.RTBF
- 10.Times
perspectives
countries
organizations
- 1.Catholic Church
- 2.Nuremberg Tribunal
- 3.Brussels Court of Appeal
- 4.State Archives of Belgium
- 5.United Nations
persons
- 1.Monique Bitu Bingi
- 2.Léa Tavares Mujinga
- 3.Léopold II
- 4.Michèle Hirsch
- 5.Marie-José Loshi
- 6.Simone Ngalula
- 7.Charles Michel
- 8.Noëlle Verbeken
- 9.Osama Krayem
- 10.Alexander De Croo
- 11.Delphine Lauwers
- 12.Elian Peltier