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Belgian ex-diplomat appeals order to stand trial in Congo’s Lumumba murder

By Thomson Reuters Mar 27, 2026 | 1:06 PM

By Alexander Chituc

BRUSSELS, March 27 (Reuters) – A former high-profile Belgian diplomat has appealed against a court decision ordering him to stand trial over ​the assassination of Patrice Lumumba, Congo’s first ‌prime minister, in 1961, the ex-diplomat’s lawyer told Reuters on Friday.

A Belgian court ordered 93-year-old Etienne Davignon, a former vice-president of the European Commission, on March 17 to face prosecution ‌over ​his alleged involvement in Lumumba’s ⁠killing 65 years ago.

Beyond ⁠confirming his client’s appeal, Davignon’s lawyer made no further comment on the case.

Prosecutors say Davignon, who was a junior diplomat at the time, participated ​in the unlawful detention or transfer of Lumumba and deprived him of his right to an ⁠impartial trial.

Of the Belgian officials ⁠accused of a role in the murder, ​Davignon is the sole surviving suspect.

Lumumba, who became prime ​minister of the country now called the Democratic ‌Republic of Congo upon its independence from Belgium in 1960, was ousted from power just months later and killed by Belgian-backed secessionist rebels on January ⁠16, 1961.

A Belgian parliamentary investigation into Lumumba’s killing concluded in 2002 that Belgium was “morally responsible” for his death. But the ⁠trial of ‌Davignon constitutes the first prosecution related ⁠to the murder, in what could be ​the ‌final opportunity to pursue accountability for ​one of ⁠the most contentious episodes in Belgium’s colonial history.

Though his government lasted just three months, Lumumba became an anti-colonial icon as African nations pushed for independence from their European masters in the 1960s.

(Reporting by Alexander ChitucEditing ​by Gareth Jones)