By moving from a ‘moral apology’ to criminal liability, the Lumumba family is forcing a global reckoning with the mechanics of regime change
The Council Chamber of the Brussels Court of First Instance last month made the historic decision, subject to appeal, to open a criminal trial against Étienne Davignon, a former Belgian diplomat, for his alleged role in the abduction and transfer of Patrice Lumumba.
This March 17 ruling delivers a blow to decades of Western legal immunity, challenging the long-standing practice of burying the 1961 assassination under the vague ‘moral responsibility’ of diplomatic apologies. The court must now decide if this will finally be prosecuted as a war crime. It is a live-wire legal precedent that connects the ‘Decapitation Doctrine’ – the strategic removal of a head of state to induce systemic national collapse.
This pattern stretches from the 1953 ousting of Mohammad Mossadegh in Iran and Jacobo Árbenz in Guatemala in 1954 to Lumumba’s Congo in 1961 – directly to the 2011 destruction of Libya, the kidnapping of the Venezuelan president, and the current open war to topple the Iranian regime. By framing these actions not as isolated incidents but as a calculated shortcut to engineer state failure, the Lumumba case threatens to dismantle the very architecture of modern external intervention.
In a statement, the European Centre for Constitutional and Human Rights (ECCHR), acting as legal counsel for the Lumumba family, described the ruling as one of “major legal significance.” This is because the court “went beyond the submissions of the Federal Prosecutor” by extending the scope of the trial to include the assassinations of Maurice Mpolo and Joseph Okito, Lumumba associates who were executed alongside him on January 17, 1961.
After six decades of impunity, Étienne Davignon, the last living alleged perpetrator. must finally answer for these war crimes. (more...)
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