Belgium: Sorry for What We Did to Mixed-Race Babies

Prime Minister Charles Michel issues an apology
By Newser Editors and Wire Services
Posted Apr 6, 2019 1:18 PM CDT
Belgium: Sorry for What We Did to Mixed-Race Babies
Belgian Prime Minister Charles Michel speaks with the media as he arrives for an EU summit in Brussels, Friday, March 22, 2019.   (AP Photo/Frank Augstein)

The Belgian government has apologized for the country's role in kidnapping thousands of mixed-race babies from their African mothers during colonial times, the AP reports. Thousands of children in what are now the Democratic Republic of Congo, Rwanda, and Burundi were taken away and raised in Belgium in Catholic-run schools and orphanages. Belgian laws forbade interracial marriages at the time, so children born from a Belgian father and Congolese mother were considered the result of illegal activity and sent away, Reuters reports.

Prime Minister Charles Michel said in a statement Thursday that "on behalf of the federal government, I present our apologies to the mixed-race children born from Belgian colonization and their families for the injustice and suffering they were subjected to." He expressed "compassion for the African mothers, whose children were torn away from them," and concern for the emotional stresses the children went through. Michel said he hoped the government's first recognition of the policy would be a step toward a collective national reckoning of Belgium's colonial past and in fighting racism today.

(More racism stories.)

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