Léon Fiévez

Léon Fiévez (30 April 1855 – 27 May 1939) was a Belgian colonial official and soldier. While serving as a colonial official in the Congo Free State, Fiévez became notorious for his harsh methods of enforcing rubber production in his territory, included the wide-scale oppression and killing of local Congolese. Fiévez's actions accrued significant coverage in the foreign press, forcing his removal from office and return to Belgium.

Léon Fiévez
Commissioner of Équateur District
In office
1 April 1893  1895
Preceded byCharles-François-Alexandre Lemaire
Succeeded byGustave-Émile Sarrazyn
Personal details
Born(1855-04-30)30 April 1855
Wallonia, Belgium
Died27 May 1939(1939-05-27) (aged 84)
NationalityBelgian
OccupationSoldier, colonial administrator

Biography

Fieves was born to a farming family in Wallonia, Belgium.[1] In 1888 he was recruited into the Force Publique, a military force formed to garrison Leopold II of Belgium's Congo Free State, arriving in the Congo in the town of Boma. Though the conquest of the Congo by the Belgians was well underway by 1888, Fievez quickly became noted as a particular effective soldier, successfully leading military expeditions in the upper Congo. In the late 1891 he was forced by illness to return to Belgium, but by 1893 had returned to the Congo. When the commissioner for the crown-controlled province of Équateur, former explorer Charles Lemaire, was wounded in 1893, colonial administrations (who had been dissatisfied with Lemaire's level of rubber production) replaced him with Fievez.[2][1]

Upon assuming the roll of commissioner, Fievez implemented a brutal system of oppression on the local Congolese population - the intent of said policies was to intimidate local peoples into giving food and rubber to the Free State as tribute.[3][4] As part of this campaign, Fieves and his forces (consisting of Force Publique and friendly Congolese tribesmen) force-ably requisitioned food from native Congolese, destroyed crops to cause famine, and carried out massacres to exterminate Congolese who resisted the Free State.[3] Villages that were unwilling or unable to provide food or rubber were looted and burned.[5] Most infamously, Fiévez - who was under orders to expend as little ammunition as possible - mandated that his soldiers and allies provide him with the severed hands of slain enemies to show that they had not wasted ammunition.[3] According to oral tradition, such actions led to Fieves being described as "the devil of the Equator" and nicknamed "Ntange" (roughly translating to "nap" or "bed", as Fievez was known to nap in the afternoon).[5]

Fievez's brutal methods took a large toll on Équateur - in late 1894 alone, over 160 villages were burned and looted by his forces with thousands of Congolese being killed or captured for use as forced laborers.[6] His policy suppressed local resistance, allowed for his district to cut costs, and resulted in Équateur producing the most rubber (650 tons) out of any Free State district in 1895 - a result which a Belgian government source described as "unequaled".[7] However, Fievez's methods were increasingly seen as overly brutal and as a liability to the Free State; this issue was compounded as word of the atrocities in his district spread and were reported on by British and American missionaries working in the Congo. His position as commissioner was not renewed in 1896 and he returned to Belgium in May of that year.[8] In 1897 he returned to the Congo to become commission for Ubangi district, which had previously been abandoned by the Free State authorities.[9]

In 1899, Fievez was sanctioned by a Belgian court for the execution of two men, the deadly assault of another man, and multiple assaults on several women.[10] This case established legal precedent that it was illegal for the Free State to employ Congolese as forced laborers, but Fievez himself was acquitted. He returned to Belgium in 1900, dying in 1939.[11]

References

  1. Van Reybrouck, David. Congo: The epic history of a people. 2014. HarperCollins Publishers. Pp. 597-618. ISBN 0062200119
  2. Alix, Florian. "Éric Vuillard. Congo." Afrique contemporaine 4 (2014): 210-213.
  3. Hochschild, Adam. King Leopold's Ghost: A Story Of Greed, Terror, And Heroism In Colonial Africa. Boston : Houghton Mifflin, 1998. Print. Pp. 166,
  4. Friedman, Hershey H., Sarah Adel, and Linda Weiser Friedman. "Is greed good? Learning business ethics from King Leopold II, mass murderer." Learning Business Ethics from King Leopold II, Mass Murderer (June 11, 2015) (2015).
  5. Boelaert, E. "Ntange." Aequatoria 15, no. 2 (1952): 58-62. Accessed September 7, 2020. http://www.jstor.org/stable/25838183.
  6. HASIAN, MAROUF. "Colonial Amnesias, Photographic Memories, and Demographic Biopolitics at the Royal Museum for Central Africa (RMCA)." Third World Quarterly 33, no. 3 (2012): 475-93. Accessed September 7, 2020. http://www.jstor.org/stable/41507182.
  7. "The Project Gutenberg eBook of The Crime Of The Congo, by A. Conan Doyle". www.gutenberg.org. Retrieved 2020-09-07.
  8. LUFUNGULA Lewono. "LES GOUVERNEURS DE L'EQUATEUR, 1885 - 1960." Annales Aequatoria 7 (1986): 149-66. Accessed September 7, 2020. http://www.jstor.org/stable/25836402.
  9. MOBUSA, NGBWAPKWA TE. "L'EXPLOITATION DU CAOUTCHOUC PAR L'ETAT INDEPENDANT DU CONGO DANS LE TERRITOIRE DE BANZYVILLE, DISTRICT DE L'UBANGI (1900-1908)." Civilisations 41, no. 1/2 (1993): 291-306. Accessed September 7, 2020. http://www.jstor.org/stable/41229835.
  10. Bala, Alain Pholo. "The Measurement of Institutions and Instability in Democratic Republic of Congo, 1880–2010." Journal of Development Perspectives 1, no. 1-2 (2017): 139-70. Accessed September 7, 2020. http://www.jstor.org/stable/10.5325/jdevepers.1.1-2.0139.
  11. "Was This Real Monster the Inspiration Behind 'Heart of Darkness'?". OZY. 2018-11-27. Retrieved 2020-09-07.
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