Zürcher Nachrichten - Senegal marks 80th anniversary of troop killings after France acknowleges colonial 'massacre'

EUR -
AED 3.861634
AFN 71.600086
ALL 98.471693
AMD 420.410081
ANG 1.897791
AOA 960.433903
ARS 1063.712824
AUD 1.632545
AWG 1.892476
AZN 1.789602
BAM 1.957244
BBD 2.109856
BDT 125.842818
BGN 1.959144
BHD 0.396331
BIF 3111.117118
BMD 1.051375
BND 1.415964
BOB 7.276367
BRL 6.355672
BSD 1.053067
BTN 89.162764
BWP 14.36646
BYN 3.44344
BYR 20606.959054
BZD 2.111357
CAD 1.478586
CDF 3017.447902
CHF 0.931623
CLF 0.037074
CLP 1022.98801
CNY 7.645631
CNH 7.658487
COP 4665.215769
CRC 534.273737
CUC 1.051375
CUP 27.86145
CVE 110.346388
CZK 25.154363
DJF 187.518308
DKK 7.458035
DOP 63.744591
DZD 140.649862
EGP 52.271125
ERN 15.770632
ETB 131.522454
FJD 2.393404
FKP 0.829869
GBP 0.828652
GEL 3.017541
GGP 0.829869
GHS 15.953767
GIP 0.829869
GMD 74.647949
GNF 9076.34912
GTQ 8.130997
GYD 220.212422
HKD 8.183849
HNL 26.663906
HRK 7.499733
HTG 138.045253
HUF 414.715
IDR 16767.283298
ILS 3.804328
IMP 0.829869
INR 89.044038
IQD 1379.583146
IRR 44249.77092
ISK 145.699012
JEP 0.829869
JMD 165.107067
JOD 0.745528
JPY 157.811983
KES 136.146934
KGS 91.283576
KHR 4245.929744
KMF 491.649444
KPW 946.237517
KRW 1484.053314
KWD 0.323195
KYD 0.877589
KZT 550.942559
LAK 23109.044515
LBP 94300.753312
LKR 305.990241
LRD 188.497237
LSL 19.03604
LTL 3.104439
LVL 0.635967
LYD 5.13879
MAD 10.523862
MDL 19.271214
MGA 4948.602868
MKD 61.606514
MMK 3414.826489
MNT 3572.573763
MOP 8.443229
MRU 41.708176
MUR 49.225647
MVR 16.25468
MWK 1825.942556
MXN 21.3752
MYR 4.679657
MZN 67.193893
NAD 19.036946
NGN 1741.66671
NIO 38.746367
NOK 11.629269
NPR 142.653433
NZD 1.794634
OMR 0.404787
PAB 1.053077
PEN 3.944209
PGK 4.250974
PHP 61.370864
PKR 292.587621
PLN 4.292722
PYG 8205.051792
QAR 3.839532
RON 4.975632
RSD 116.96337
RUB 110.394074
RWF 1453.13032
SAR 3.950247
SBD 8.777465
SCR 14.623095
SDG 632.402526
SEK 11.573825
SGD 1.414316
SHP 0.829869
SLE 23.919028
SLL 22046.822729
SOS 601.826716
SRD 37.199239
STD 21761.349344
SVC 9.214234
SYP 2641.61224
SZL 19.041864
THB 36.051935
TJS 11.478812
TMT 3.679814
TND 3.318548
TOP 2.462424
TRY 36.54276
TTD 7.126595
TWD 34.08927
TZS 2770.374193
UAH 43.965619
UGX 3874.857975
USD 1.051375
UYU 45.463532
UZS 13505.961579
VES 50.2511
VND 26708.09086
VUV 124.821408
WST 2.93501
XAF 656.422426
XAG 0.033808
XAU 0.000397
XCD 2.841395
XDR 0.800983
XOF 656.434922
XPF 119.331742
YER 263.211768
ZAR 19.041198
ZMK 9463.640471
ZMW 28.45899
ZWL 338.54247
  • RBGPF

    -1.0000

    61

    -1.64%

  • CMSC

    -0.0100

    24.56

    -0.04%

  • SCS

    -0.2000

    13.52

    -1.48%

  • RYCEF

    0.0600

    7.5

    +0.8%

  • RIO

    0.2400

    63.51

    +0.38%

  • CMSD

    -0.0800

    24.31

    -0.33%

  • GSK

    0.5900

    34.9

    +1.69%

  • NGG

    -0.4100

    62.97

    -0.65%

  • VOD

    -0.0400

    8.83

    -0.45%

  • AZN

    1.0100

    68.05

    +1.48%

  • RELX

    0.1500

    47.48

    +0.32%

  • BCE

    0.2700

    27.31

    +0.99%

  • BTI

    -0.7000

    37.03

    -1.89%

  • BCC

    -1.0900

    146.43

    -0.74%

  • JRI

    0.0400

    13.54

    +0.3%

  • BP

    0.4600

    29.45

    +1.56%

Senegal marks 80th anniversary of troop killings after France acknowleges colonial 'massacre'
Senegal marks 80th anniversary of troop killings after France acknowleges colonial 'massacre' / Photo: JOHN WESSELS - AFP

Senegal marks 80th anniversary of troop killings after France acknowleges colonial 'massacre'

Senegal on Sunday commemorated 80 years since the killing of dozens of African troops by French forces that the former colonial master acknowledged this week had been a "massacre".

Text size:

Heads of state from Mauritania, the Comoros, Gabon, the Gambia and Guinea-Bissau, and France's Foreign Minister Jean-Noel Barrot joined Senegal's President Bassirou Diomaye Faye who has used the anniversary to call for a new relationship with France.

All laid wreaths at the scene of the killings at the former Thiaroye military camp, just outside Dakar, which have long been a stain on relations between Senegal and France.

Around 1,600 soldiers from West Africa who had been captured by Germany while fighting for France were sent back to Dakar in November 1944.

After arriving at the Thiaroye military camp, discontent mounted over unpaid wages and demands to be treated on a par with white soldiers. Some protesters refused to return to their home countries without their due.

French forces opened fire on December 1, killing at least 35 people, French authorities said at the time. Historians say the real death toll could be as high as 400 as some of the victims' graves have yet to be disclosed.

The 202 graves at Thiaroye cemetery are anonymous and it is not known how many are victims of the 1944 killings.

"Defenceless African heroes, armed with courage, dignity and African solidarity were killed in cold blood. It was a massacre," said Faye.

"The scale of this crime remains minimised and often even denied by some elements of the heirs of those who committed it," he added.

Elected this year on a promise to reclaim national sovereignty, Faye said there had been 80 years of "omerta", or official silence, on the deaths by Senegal's leaders.

France's President Emmanuel Macron sent a letter to Faye this week calling the event a "massacre", according to the Senegalese leader.

Barrot said at the ceremony that the Thiaroye killings were "a gaping wound in our common history".

Faye announced the letter in an interview with AFP in which he also said that France should close its military base in the West African state as part of a resetting of relations.

In the interview, Faye said that China was now Senegal's largest trading partner and investor.

"Does China have a military presence in Senegal? No. Does that mean our relations are cut? No."

France, faced with growing opposition to its military presence in several African countries, has said it will cut its troop numbers as part of a review.

Faye told Sunday's ceremony that it was important to pay tribute to the dead soldiers of 1944 "and establish a new relationship with ourselves, our history and the descendents of the perpetrators of this tragedy".

He praised Macron's "moral courage" for finally acknowledging that it was a "massacre" and said it would be taught in schools and streets, and public squares would be named after Thiaroye and the soldiers killed there.

Faye said the soldiers had to become part of our "collective conscience" and that telling children was not intended to arouse "resentment, anger or hatred" but to ensure the truth was revealed and remembered.

T.Furrer--NZN