Belgium’s Lumumba case raises a question Africa still avoids

On January 20, a court in Brussels, Belgium, convened a procedural hearing in the long-running case concerning the assassination of Patrice Lumumba, the first prime minister of the Democratic Republic of the Congo (DRC). The hearing did not revisit the full history of the killing, but was limited to determining whether the case should proceed under Belgian law.

At the centre of the proceedings stands Etienne Davignon, a 93-year-old former Belgian diplomat and senior state official. Federal prosecutors are seeking to prosecute Davignon on charges linked to Lumumba’s unlawful detention and degrading treatment in the months preceding his execution, allegations he denies. The case follows Belgium’s acknowledgement of moral responsibility for Lumumba’s death, and represents an incomplete, belated attempt to reckon with colonial violence through legal means.

That such a reckoning is taking place at all, however limited, raises a more uncomfortable question. While a former colonial power is revisiting aspects of its role in Lumumba’s killing, much of postcolonial Africa is still failing to confront the political vision for which he was eliminated. Lumumba’s assassination is mourned, but his analysis is rarely taken seriously. His name is invoked, but his demands are quietly set aside.

Lumumba is often remembered as an anti-colonial martyr and periodically rediscovered across Africa, but the substance of his political thought is rarely engaged. The questions he raised at the moment of independence, about sovereignty, land and the limits of political freedom in postcolonial Africa, remain largely unresolved.

That neglect is not accidental.

Many post-colonial African leaders have not honoured Lumumba’s legacy precisely because of the radical clarity of his critique, and what it would demand of those in power today, including governing coalitions that have learned to profit from the systems he sought to dismantle. To understand why his ideas still unsettle so many in Africa and abroad, it is necessary to return to the speech that announced his politics publicly, and to the reactions it provoked at the time.

On June 30, 1960, at the Palais de la Nation in Leopoldville, now Kinshasa, Lumumba addressed the official independence ceremony in the presence of Belgium’s King Baudouin. The speech has since been recognised as one of the most consequential political interventions of Africa’s decolonisation era. At the time, however, it was treated by much of the Western press as an act of provocation.

Writing the next day in The New York Times, foreign correspondent Harry Gilroy described Lumumba’s address as “militant” and claimed it had “marred” an occasion meant to celebrate independence in a spirit of colonial goodwill. Gilroy contrasted Lumumba unfavourably with a conciliatory address by President Joseph Kasa-Vubu, observed that “the Soviet diplomats present seemed to be enjoying the occasion”, and framed the moment through a Cold War lens that cast Lumumba as erratic and ideologically suspect. This framing was not incidental, but part of a broader Western media reflex that treated uncompromising anti-colonial speech as a threat to order rather than an assertion of political agency.

A special report by The Guardian on July 1, 1960, was equally revealing, if more detailed. The British paper described Lumumba’s speech as “pugnacious” and disruptive to royal dignity. Much attention was paid to etiquette, to the king’s discomfort, to the delay in the official programme and to the supposed embarrassment caused to Belgium on what was meant to be a ceremonial handover.

According to contemporaneous reporting, Baudouin nearly abandoned the independence ceremony altogether as officials scrambled to contain the fallout. What went largely unexamined in the West was the accuracy of Lumumba’s account and how it came into being.

Lumumba revised and expanded his remarks while seated inside the Palais de la Nation, after listening to Baudouin’s address, and without having been scheduled to speak at all. His address was not part of the official programme.

It was a response.

The gulf between the king’s self-congratulatory narrative and Lumumba’s prophetic speech could not have been clearer. Baudouin praised the “genius” of King Leopold II, under whose personal rule an estimated 10 million or so Congolese died through forced labour, violence and famine in the pursuit of rubber and ivory. He spoke of Belgium’s so-called civilising mission and presented independence as benevolent stewardship, without acknowledging the racial terror, dispossession or mass death it caused.

Lumumba rejected that framing outright.

“We have known ironies, insults and blows,” he said, speaking of a system that reduced Africans to subjects rather than citizens. He described land seized through racially discriminatory laws, political prisoners exiled within their own country and forced labour paid at wages that could not sustain human life. Independence, he insisted, was not a gift but the outcome of struggle, and it would be meaningless without dignity, equality and control over national wealth.

What unsettled Western observers was not that Lumumba was inaccurate. It was that he spoke plainly, in public, and in the presence of European power. Colonial self-vindication was acceptable. Anti-colonial truth-telling was not. Lumumba paid with his life for naming realities that others would later learn to manage, soften and profit from. The fixation on his tone, timing and supposed militancy functioned as an early delegitimisation of African political agency.

History would prove Lumumba’s diagnosis correct.

One of the central demands of his speech was that “the lands of our native country truly benefit its children”.

More than six decades later, the contradiction persists.

The DRC holds some of the world’s most strategic mineral reserves, including those essential to global energy transitions. Yet around three-quarters of the population lives in poverty, while mining revenues are dominated by foreign corporations. In the DRC, World Bank-backed reforms and liberalisation programmes, particularly from the 1980s onwards and formalised in the early 2000s, dismantled state control over mining, driving privatisation that returned cobalt and copper to foreign companies and weakened national control over strategic resources.

Resource extraction has continued alongside displacement, conflict, and environmental degradation, particularly in the east.

The same pattern is visible elsewhere.

In Nigeria, crude oil exports have generated hundreds of billions of dollars since the 1970s, yet more than 133 million Nigerians live in multidimensional poverty. Different national contexts, similar outcomes: political independence without economic sovereignty. Communities in the Niger Delta endure chronic pollution, underdevelopment and violence, while wealth flows outward.

Lumumba also spoke directly to political freedom.

He pledged to “stop the persecution of free thought” and to ensure that “all citizens enjoy to the fullest extent the basic freedoms provided for by the Universal Declaration of Human Rights”.

This, too, was not lofty speechmaking.

It was a warning.

Across the continent, elementary democratic commitments have been repeatedly broken through violence, repression and deeply compromised electoral processes, including in Uganda, Tanzania and Eritrea.

Militarisation has become a default mode of politics, with wars, coups and power struggles now recurrent features across the continent, from protracted conflicts in the Horn of Africa to repeated military takeovers elsewhere.

Lumumba cautioned explicitly against rule by force in Africa. “We shall institute in the country a peace resting not on guns and bayonets,” he said, “but on concord and goodwill.”

That vision has been steadily abandoned.

Africa is independent in form, not substance.

Corruption, repression and neocolonial systems continue to hollow it out.

The African Union estimates that Africa loses around $89bn annually through illicit financial flows, while CFA franc controls and debt conditionalities continue to impede socioeconomic progress. Courts can examine individual acts, but history judges systems, and the systems Lumumba warned against remain firmly in place. That is why the case unfolding in Belgium matters beyond its legal scope.

The Belgian courtroom process revisits the mechanics of Lumumba’s death, but it cannot resolve the deeper historical and political injury his killing represented.

Lumumba’s family, the DRC, and the continent are owed full accountability for his assassination, just as Africans deserve reparations for slavery and colonialism.

However, justice for the past is inseparable from responsibility in the present.

His legacy requires more than statues and memorials.

Continued failure to meet the standard Lumumba articulated has produced not stability or dignity, but extraction, inequality and recurring cycles of violence.

That remains the unfinished business of Patrice Lumumba’s life and death.

A Song for My Land: Children highlight pesticide use in Argentina

A teacher and his students in rural Argentina use music to raise the alarm about the dangers of pesticide spraying.

In rural Argentina, a passionate music teacher discovers that planes and tractors are spraying toxic pesticides next to local schools, threatening the children’s health. Refusing to stay silent, he joins forces with his students to write songs to raise awareness.

Their music quickly becomes a voice of resistance, culminating in an environmental concert, where the children and renowned Argentinian musicians unite to sing for justice, hope, and the right to a safe environment.

Why did Israel join Trump’s ‘Board of Peace’ after raising objections?

Days after opposing elements of the multilayered structure that Washington has proposed to govern the Palestinian territory, Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu has agreed to join US President Donald Trump’s “Board of Peace” for the future of Gaza.

Given that the Israeli leader has played a significant part in the genocidal war in Gaza since October 2023, in which over 71, 450 people have died, the idea of Netanyahu serving on the board sparked criticism from many Palestinians and their supporters. The International Criminal Court (ICC) has issued an arrest warrant for Netanyahu over alleged war crimes committed in Palestinian territory.

However, many analysts think that what appears to be changing Israeli positions may have been a deliberate decision.

Netanyahu criticized the Gaza “executive board” just days before he accepted a seat on the multi-national board, claiming that its makeup “was not in line with Israel and goes against its policy.”

The US-led board, which includes representatives of nations close to Israel, former UK prime minister Tony Blair, US Secretary of State Marco Rubio, and Jared Kushner, has a defined portfolio that includes “governance capacity-building, regional relations, reconstruction, investment attraction, large-scale funding, and capital mobilization,” according to the White House.

The Israeli army is also preventing entry to the enclave by the very people charged with rebuilding it at the same time that Netanyahu prepares to sit alongside them on the board.

Therefore, the Israeli government’s decision to join may serve as a ploy to sabotage upcoming efforts to control Gaza’s governance, according to analysts.

Trump will be able to veto all of the board’s decisions, but as chairman, he may be able to do so, which could lead to “negotiations” by Israel regarding these decisions.

Trump has clearly shown that he will make deals, according to Rami Khouri, a fellow at the American University of Beirut. “Israel does not have a veto,” Khouri said.

Trump is “long-term Zionist planner” intent on buying time, according to Khouri, who is transactional and eager to close the Iran deal.

According to Israeli media reports, Israel has already criticized Trump’s inclusion of Turkiye and Qatar on the board.

Yair Lapid, the leader of the Israeli opposition, reportedly told Netanyahu that Trump had made the board’s announcement “without your knowledge” in the Knesset. He claimed that the prime minister was being abused and that Hamas members in Istanbul and Doha were being given the task of managing Gaza.

Netanyahu acknowledged a “disagreement” with Washington regarding the advisory council, saying “there will be no Turkish or Qatari soldiers in Gaza.”

A “disruption” strategy

Analysts claim that the real deadlock is operational, despite the fact that the board members have been the focus of the diplomatic row so far.

A 15-person committee of politically independent Palestinian experts tasked with rebuilding and under the control of the Board of Peace, according to a report from Haaretz on Tuesday, Israel is refusing to let them enter the Gaza Strip via the Rafah crossing. This week, these “technocrats” were scheduled to take over the Strip’s civil administration.

Therefore, there appear to be divergences between the US and Israel regarding Gaza and the second phase of the ceasefire agreement, which this committee is a part of. However, according to analysts, the allies’ relationships don’t actually break down despite the rhetoric.

Expert on Israeli affairs Mohannad Mustafa told Al Jazeera, “I do not call it a clash, but rather a divergence.”

Israel will use tools to obstruct the committee’s work, including limiting their movement and keeping the Rafah crossing closed, because “Netanyahu cannot say “no” to Trump directly.

In the end, Israel wants to break up the ceasefire’s second “humanitarian phase” with its subsequent “withdrawal phase.”

According to Mustafa, “Israel will tell everyone to keep working with your committees, but we won’t withdraw.” They are currently extending their control of the Gaza Strip to 55 to 60%.

(Al Jazeera)

Security versus reconstruction: The “high-rise” threat

The Israeli military is already raising the alarm over Gaza’s reconstruction, which is at the top of the peace plan’s agenda.

According to Haaretz, Israeli military officials are concerned about the proposed “high-rise towers” in a new Gaza, specifically the physical reconstruction plans. They claim this would “unacceptable” because they would have a view of southern Israeli military installations and settlements.

Israel effectively freezes reconstruction by citing security threats and demanding a distinct demilitarization process that no international organization is capable of implementing.

This demonstrates the absurdity of “the US vision clashing with Israeli reality,” according to Mustafa.

“Imagine creating residential clusters in a region that Israel still has military control over.” The committee may begin overseeing the locations with an Israeli security clearance.

A compensation compliance pattern

Khouri contends that Israel’s “brinkmanship” appears to be a 75-year-old historical game, in which it only concedes to US demands after receiving a significant amount of compensation.

According to Khouri, “it will try to get guarantees in return,” citing precedents like the 1979 and 2000 withdrawals from Lebanon. It obtained guarantees of unprecedented levels of aid, support from the UN, and strategic defense collaborations, according to the US.

In order to make the Board of Peace function, Netanyahu is likely positioning himself to demand new security guarantees or perhaps access to cutting-edge weaponry by creating a crisis through the inclusion of Turkiye and Qatar or the construction of high-rise apartment blocks.

A pressure cooker at home

Netanyahu is negotiating with Trump in addition to ensuring his country’s political future.

According to a recent poll conducted by Channel 13, 53% of Israelis consider the Board of Peace’s participation by the Turkish-Qatari to be an “Israeli failure.” The US plan was condemned by Finance Minister Bezalel Smotrich, who described it as “a bad plan for Israel.”

Smotrich also claimed that nations like the UK and Egypt are hostile to Israel’s security, according to the Israeli newspaper Ma’ariv. Instead of requesting Israel’s withdrawal, Motrich has continued to call for military rule over Gaza and the “voluntary migration” of its population.

According to Mustafa, “Netanyahu is in a political whirlwind.” He is being squeezed by the Americans, the settlers who want to return to Gaza, and the opposition.

The election is approaching.

The Israeli electoral calendar, which is likely to hold elections in October 2026, is the final variable.

This will be regarded as a failure, according to Mustafa, “if Israel withdraws from Gaza without Hamas being disarmed.” “Netanyahu will prefer to serve his own political goals to Trump’s approval.”

Despite Trump’s growing frustration, there hasn’t been a formal agreement on when Hamas’ disarmament will occur, despite the ceasefire agreement with Israel. He stated last week that he would push for the “comprehensive” demilitarization of Hamas, and he stated in a social media post that “they can do this the easy way or the hard way.”

Bottom line, according to Khouri is that Israel is terrified of losing “sole security control” of the Strip while US public opinion is shifting further into horror at the genocide in Gaza.

Who were the Palestinian journalists Israeli forces just killed?

NewsFeed

In central Gaza, three Palestinian journalists were killed while they were employed by an Egyptian aid organization when Israel targeted them with an Israeli bomb. According to Israeli sources, the vehicle was allegedly targeted for “drone use.” In separate attacks across the Strip, eight additional Palestinians were killed.

Club Brugge fans jailed for impersonating Borat in Kazakhstan

Belgian media reported on Thursday that Club Brugge supporters who wore “mankinis” made famous by the satirical character Borat for their team’s Champions League game against Kairat Almaty were imprisoned in Kazakhstan for five days for disobeying the rules.

The trio were detained in the Astana Arena in swimwear, which Sacha Baron Cohen, an English actor-comedian, wore in his film Borat! Making Mocking Kazakh and the United States is based on cultural lessons learned from America.

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More than 500 Club Brugge supporters traveled nearly 6, 000 kilometers (3,700 miles) to watch Tuesday’s game between the trio in the stands before being taken away by police.

The Astana police’s statement read in a statement released on Thursday, according to Belgian media, that “Three men committed acts during a football match that showed disrespect and disturbed public order.”

Three foreign fans were taken to a police station after being detained by police.

Additionally, the police claimed that administrative proceedings had been started for minor hooliganism and public indolence. On Wednesday, they received a five-day prison sentence.

Belgium’s Ministry of Foreign Affairs declared that it was keeping tabs on the situation. We are providing consular assistance to our fellow citizens. We are unable to provide any additional information for privacy reasons, the statement said.

Borat, a fictional journalist from the former Soviet Union, is depicted in Baron Cohen’s satirical portrayal of Borat, a fictional journalist from the former Soviet Union, breaking with stereotypes held by Westerners about the Central Asian nation. Borat tries to deceive politicians and others into making egotistical demands.

Azeez Al-Shaair’s anti-genocide note: Muslims tackle NFL fine with charity

American football player Azeez Al-Shaair, who was fined by the National Football League for sticking an anti-genocide message on his nose tape, is the subject of a petition raising money for charitable causes in his honor.

People in the community wanted to change the $11, 593 penalty against the Houston Texans’ linebacker into something positive, according to Nimrah Riaz, founder of Siraat Strategies, a sports consulting firm geared toward Muslims.

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In a pre-game TV interview last week, Al-Shaair wore nose tape with the phrase “Stop the Genocide” without making any specific reference to a particular conflict. However, it was widely believed that the atrocities in Gaza and Sudan were the subject of the message.

Instead of having that moment end in punishment, the community chose to redirect it, Riaz said, “to allow us to all collectively raise funds for Palestine and Sudan for those who actually need it,” Riaz said.

Husain Abdullah, a former NFL player, made a $11 593 donation to the Human Development Fund (HDF) as a result of the fine. The same amount will also be donated to HDF in a separate, ongoing fundraiser by Riaz on Launchgood.

Al-Shaair’s note, which is vague, was reported by ESPN as saying the league had fined the player for breaking its uniform rules.

In an effort to completely or partially destroy the Palestinian people, international leaders and UN investigators have accused Israel of carrying out a genocide in Gaza.

a vigilance to anti-genocide propaganda

On Sunday, Al-Shaair was seen watching a different game against the New England Patriots, but he did not wear the note during game time.

The player later claimed that if he kept the message, he would face punishment for keeping it.

The linebacker claimed he understood the game’s warning to not display the message during the game but accepted the fine.

Al-Shaair argued that other players’ non-sporting statements were the only ones that led to financial penalties.

That was a fine, I knew. He said to the reporters in the dressing room, “I fully understood what I was doing.” However, I was informed that I would be kicked out of the game if I did that during the game. So, I believe that was the area that caused me to be confused.

It is not clear who issued the warning to Al-Shaair. The Houston Texans team did not respond to Al Jazeera’s request for comment by the time of publication.

While most professional sport leagues in the world attempt to present themselves as politically neutral, critics say athletes who speak out for Palestinian rights in the US and the West are especially scorned and punished.

In 2023, the NFL teams held pre-game moments of silence in honour of Israelis killed during Hamas’s October 7 attack – a gesture that ignored the suffering in Gaza as the Palestinian death toll from the horrific Israeli response was mounting.

Some teams also released individual statements in support of Israel at that time.

Several NFL team owners are outspoken supporters of Israel – most notably the New England Patriots ‘ Robert Kraft, a major donor for pro-Israel groups, including the American Israel Public Affairs Committee (AIPAC).

The NFL emerged as a flashpoint in 2016 after San Francisco 49ers quarterback Colin Kaepernick kneeled during the US national anthem to protest racism and police brutality in the US.

Critics of the move accused Kaepernick of disrespecting national symbols and called on the league to intervene. But the player’s supporters praised him for his willingness to stand up to injustice despite potential repercussions for his career.

Kaepernick was not signed by any team after he became a free agent at the end of that season.

With Kaepernick out, other players continued his kneeling protest.

In 2018, the NFL issued a policy requiring players to stand during the anthem or stay in the locker room after mounting criticism and calls for a boycott by President Donald Trump and his allies.

‘ Unspoken expectation ‘

The NFL does allow limited advocacy through the “My Cause My Cleats” campaign – an initiative that lets players display messages on their boots.

Al-Shaair has used the programme to raise donations for the Palestine Children’s Relief Fund (PCRF) with shoes featuring the word “free” and data about the atrocities in Gaza.

But his recent nose tape message has elevated his activism at a time when Palestinians in Gaza continue to suffer from near-daily&nbsp, Israeli attacks in the bitter cold amid a lack of shelters despite the Trump-brokered “ceasefire”.

Riaz said Muslim athletes face “heightened consequences” for speaking out for Palestine, so there is an “unspoken expectation” for them to remain silent on the issue.

She added that Muslim Americans in Texas and beyond are responding positively to Al-Shaair’s message and trying to reach out to him for speaking engagements. “The community is loving it”, Riaz told Al Jazeera.

Earlier this week, the Houston chapter of the Council on American Islamic Relations (CAIR) said the NFL should not fine a player for rejecting genocide.

The message of “Azeez Al-Shaair” was rooted in fundamental human respect and concern for the safety of all. Imran Ghani, CAIR-Houston director of operations, said in a statement that that should not be contentious or even subject to a fine.

Many pro-Israel supporters were offended by Al-Shaair’s note, with some calling for his punishment and suspension.