Historys deadliest king by Georges NzongolaNtalaja

On December 12, 1904,
Chief Lontulu laid 110 twigs

in front of a foreign commission.

Every twig represented a person
in his village who died

because of King Leopold’s horrific regime
in the Congo—

all in the name of rubber.

Chief Lontulu separated the twigs
into four piles:

tribal nobles, men, women, and children—

then proceeded
to name the dead of one-by-one.

His testimony joined hundreds of others
to help bring an end

to one of the greatest atrocities
in history.

Beginning in the late 1800s,

European countries participated in the
so-called “Scramble for Africa.”

They colonized 90% of the continent,

exploiting African resources
and enriching their countries.

Belgium had recently become
an independent kingdom.

Its ruler, Leopold II,
wanted to acquire what he called

“a slice of this magnificent
African cake.”

Meanwhile, he read colonial explorer
Henry Morton Stanley’s reports

about traveling through Africa.

Stanley emphasized
the Congo basin’s majesty.

So, in 1879, Leopold contracted him
to return to the Congo.

There, Stanley deceived leaders
into signing some 450 treaties

allowing for land use.

Leopold persuaded the US and European
powers to grant him ownership

of the Congo,

pledging to protect free trade
in the region.

And on May 29, 1885, a territory more than
80 times the size of Belgium

and home to 20 million people was declared
his own private colony—

by no one it actually belonged to.

Leopold lost no time consolidating power
in what he called the Congo Free State.

He claimed land, raised an army,

and forced many Congolese men
to complete unpaid labor.

Things got even worse when, in 1887,

a Scottish inventor redeveloped
the pneumatic tire,

creating a massive international
market for rubber.

The Congo had one of the world’s
largest supplies.

Leopold seized the opportunity,

requiring villages to meet
ever-greater rubber quotas.

Congolese men had to harvest
the material from wild vines.

As supplies drained, they walked for days
to gather enough.

Leopold’s army entered villages and held
women and children hostage

until the impossible quota was met.

Soldiers sexually violated women
and deprived children of food and water.

Congolese people rebelled—

they refused to cooperate,
fought Leopold’s soldiers,

hid in the forests,
and destroyed rubber vines.

Leopold’s army responded to resistance
or failure to meet quotas

with unflinching torture and executions.

Because guns and ammunition
were expensive,

officers ordered soldiers to prove they
used their bullets in the line of duty

by removing a hand from anyone
they killed.

However, many soldiers hunted
using their guns.

To avoid harsh penalties and account
for lost bullets,

they cut off living people’s hands.

They also used this practice
as punishment.

If rubber quotas weren’t met,

soldiers would sever people’s hands
and bring them to their commanders

instead of rubber.

The regime dramatically upended
daily life and agriculture,

causing widespread starvation and disease.

Meanwhile, King Leopold built monuments
and private estates

with the wealth he extracted.

Soon, people brought international
attention to the horrific abuses

of Leopold’s Congo Free State.

In 1890, American journalist
George Washington Williams

accused King Leopold of “deceit, fraud,
robberies, arson,

murder, slave-raiding,
and [a] general policy of cruelty.”

In 1903, Diplomat Roger Casement
wrote a report that corroborated

the nature and scale of the atrocities.

It was published the following year.

In response, Leopold appointed his own
commission to investigate the accusations.

They heard numerous witness statements
in the Congo— Chief Lontulu’s included.

The report only confirmed the worst.

Facing pressure, Leopold relinquished
control of the Congo

to the Belgian government in 1908.

But this did not mean justice.

The Belgian state awarded Leopold
50 million francs

“in testimony for his great sacrifice
in favor of the Congo.”

He died the following year.

Crowds booed his funeral procession.

For more than 50 years following,
the Congo remained a Belgian colony,

until declaring independence in 1960.

That year, the Congo elected its first
prime minister, Patrice Lumumba.

But months later, he was unseated
in a US and Belgium backed coup.

In early 1961, Lumumba was assassinated
under Belgian supervision.

The coup launched the country
into a decades-long dictatorship.

Around 10 million Congolese people
are thought to have died

during Leopold’s occupation and looting
of the Congo.

Despite this devastation, calls
for reparations have gone unanswered.

To this day, throughout Belgium can be
found the monuments King Leopold built

on a foundation of inconceivable cruelty.

1904 年 12 月 12 日,
朗图鲁酋长

在一个外国委员会面前放置了 110 根树枝。

每根树枝都代表
他村里的一个人,他

死于利奥波德国王在刚果的可怕政权——

所有这些都以橡胶的名义。

伦图鲁酋长将树枝
分成四堆:

部落贵族、男人、女人和孩子——

然后
一一列举死者的名字。

他的证词与其他数百人
一起帮助

结束历史上最严重的
暴行之一。

从 1800 年代后期开始,

欧洲国家参与了
所谓的“争夺非洲”。

他们殖民了非洲大陆 90% 的土地,

开发非洲资源
并丰富自己的国家。

比利时最近成为
一个独立的王国。

它的统治者利奥波德二世
想要获得他所谓的

“一块宏伟的
非洲蛋糕”。

与此同时,他阅读了殖民探险家
亨利·莫顿·斯坦利

关于穿越非洲的报告。

斯坦利强调
了刚果盆地的威严。

因此,1879 年,利奥波德与他
签约返回刚果。

在那里,斯坦利欺骗领导人
签署了大约 450 项

允许使用土地的条约。

利奥波德说服美国和欧洲
大国授予他

对刚果的所有权,

承诺保护
该地区的自由贸易。

1885 年 5 月 29 日,面积超过
比利时 80 倍

、拥有 2000 万人口的领土被宣布为
他自己的私人殖民地——

它实际上不属于任何人。

利奥波德不失时机地
在他所谓的刚果自由邦巩固权力。

他占领了土地,组建了一支军队,

并强迫许多刚果
男子完成无偿劳动。

1887 年,

一位苏格兰发明家重新开发
了充气轮胎,为橡胶

创造了巨大的国际
市场,情况变得更糟。

刚果拥有世界上
最大的供应国之一。

利奥波德抓住机会,

要求村庄满足
越来越高的橡胶配额。

刚果人不得不
从野生藤蔓中收获材料。

随着物资的消耗,他们步行了好几
天才收集到足够的东西。

利奥波德的军队进入村庄,将
妇女和儿童扣为人质,

直到达到不可能的配额。

士兵对妇女进行性侵犯
,剥夺儿童的食物和水。

刚果人民反抗——

他们拒绝合作,
与利奥波德的士兵作战,

躲在森林里
,毁坏橡胶藤。

利奥波德的军队

以坚定的酷刑和处决来应对抵抗或未能达到配额。

由于枪支和弹药
价格昂贵,

军官命令士兵通过从他们杀死的任何人身上移开一只手来证明他们
在执行任务时使用了子弹

然而,许多士兵
使用枪支进行狩猎。

为了避免严厉的惩罚和
丢失子弹的原因,

他们切断了活人的手。

他们还用这种做法
作为惩罚。

如果不满足橡胶配额,

士兵将切断人们的双手
,而不是橡胶,将它们带到他们的指挥官那里

该政权极大地颠覆了
日常生活和农业,

造成了广泛的饥饿和疾病。

与此同时,利奥波德国王用他提取的财富建造了纪念碑
和私人庄园

很快,人们就引起了国际社会

对利奥波德刚果自由州可怕的虐待行为的关注。

1890 年,美国记者
乔治·华盛顿·威廉姆斯

指责利奥波德国王“欺骗、欺诈、
抢劫、纵火、

谋杀、掠夺奴隶
和 [a] 一般的残忍政策”。

1903 年,外交官罗杰·凯斯门特
撰写了一份报告,证实

了暴行的性质和规模。

次年出版。

作为回应,利奥波德任命了自己的
委员会来调查这些指控。

他们在刚果听到了许多证人证词——
包括隆图鲁酋长的证词。

报告只证实了最坏的情况。

面对压力,利奥波德于 1908 年
将刚果的控制权

交给比利时政府。

但这并不意味着正义。

比利时政府授予利奥波德
5000 万法郎

“以证明他为刚果做出了巨大
牺牲”。

他于次年去世。

人群嘘他的葬礼队伍。

在此后的 50 多年里
,刚果一直是比利时的殖民地,

直到 1960 年宣布独立。

那一年,刚果选出了第一
任总理帕特里斯·卢蒙巴。

但几个月后,他
在美国和比利时支持的政变中被下台。

1961年初,卢蒙巴
在比利时的监督下被暗杀。

政变使该国
陷入长达数十年的独裁统治。

据信,

在利奥波德占领和抢劫刚果期间,约有 1000 万刚果人丧生

尽管遭受了这种破坏,但
要求赔偿的呼吁仍未得到答复。

直到今天,在整个比利时都可以
找到利奥波德国王

在难以想象的残酷基础上建造的纪念碑。