Politics

The influential Belgian aristocrat accused of assassinating a head of government has appealed the decision

Count Etienne Davignon, a former high-ranking Belgian diplomat and former vice-president of the European Commission, challenged at an appeals court the court's decision that sent him to trial for “participation in war crimes” in connection with the 1961 assassination of Patrice Lumumba, the first prime minister in the history of the Democratic Republic of Congo, reports Reuters.

The announcement was made by Davignon's lawyer in a comment to Reuters, without giving further details.

Sent to court earlier in March, Davignon became the first person ever to be indicted in connection with this dark chapter in the relationship between Belgium and its former colony Congo, which became independent in 1960, now the Democratic Republic of Congo. Between 1971 and 1997 the country was called Zaire.

Patrice Lumumba, the first head of government of the independent Congo state, was ousted in a coup d'état in September 1960, after he had begun to approach the USSR during one of the most tense periods of the Cold War.

He was arrested, imprisoned and finally executed along with two of his lieutenants in a forest on January 17, 1961, with the complicity of Belgian officers and apparently also with the involvement of CIA agents from the US.

Count Davignon is the only survivor of the plot

The next day, the body of Lumumba, the founder of the Congolese National Movement, was dismembered and dissolved in acid. One of the Belgian agents involved extracted two of the Congolese leader's teeth as a “hunting trophy”.

The agent kept the secret until 1999, a year before his death, when he confessed to the murder, for which Belgium officially acknowledged its “moral responsibility” and opened the way for the judicial investigations that have now charged Count Etienne Davignon.

After a career in diplomacy, he held several portfolios as European Commissioner between 1977 and 1981, then Vice-President of the European Commission until 1985, after which he held the presidency of the Egmon Institute, a think tank, and was part of the influential Bilderberg Group until 2011, chairing its annual conference between 1998 and 2001.

Now 93, Davignon is the only person still alive among the 11 Belgians named in the war crimes complaint filed in 2011 by Patrice Lumumba's children, and the decision to bring him to court, which can still be appealed, came after more than ten years of investigations.

Davignon's defense has argued that the statute of limitations for prosecution for the alleged crimes has expired, but the family of the former Congolese leader believes it is not too late to prosecute what his lawyers describe as a “state crime”.

Ashley Davis

I’m Ashley Davis as an editor, I’m committed to upholding the highest standards of integrity and accuracy in every piece we publish. My work is driven by curiosity, a passion for truth, and a belief that journalism plays a crucial role in shaping public discourse. I strive to tell stories that not only inform but also inspire action and conversation.

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