By: Staff Reporter | editor@thepointafricanews.com

Belgian prosecutors have confirmed they are seeking to prosecute 92-year-old former diplomat Etienne Davignon in connection with the 1961 assassination of Congolese independence leader Patrice Lumumba. Davignon, who served as a top official in Belgium’s foreign ministry at the time, is the only surviving member of a group of ten Belgians named in a 2011 civil suit filed by Lumumba’s children, accusing them of complicity in the killing.
The decision follows years of legal efforts and historical investigations into Belgium’s colonial-era role in the Democratic Republic of Congo. A 2001 Belgian parliamentary inquiry acknowledged Belgium’s “moral responsibility” in the transfer of Lumumba to Katanga, where he was executed shortly after Congo’s independence. While no prosecutions resulted from that report, Belgium formally apologized in 2002 and, in 2022, returned a tooth believed to belong to Lumumba to his family in a symbolic act of closure.
Prosecutors now argue that the assassination, classified under international law as a war crime, remains prosecutable under Belgium’s universal jurisdiction statutes. The case underscores Belgium’s broader reckoning with its colonial legacy and ongoing calls for justice from the Lumumba family and Congolese civil society.
Davignon has not publicly commented on the prosecution efforts. The case remains under judicial review, and a decision on whether to proceed to trial is expected in the coming months.

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