
Senegal seeks answers 80 years after French colonial massacre of soldiers
Al Jazeera
Commemoration prompts renewed calls for an investigation into the killing of African soldiers by the French army in 1944.
Senegal has commemorated the 80th anniversary of a colonial-era massacre of African soldiers who fought for France during World War II and were shot by French soldiers in 1944 for demanding fair treatment and payment on their return.
France’s foreign affairs minister was in attendance at the ceremony in Thiaroye on Sunday as were other African heads of state as Senegal continues to demand answers about the massacre.
The West African country has long demanded its former coloniser take responsibility, officially apologise and properly investigate the massacre that took place in Thiaroye, a fishing village on the outskirts of Senegal’s capital, Dakar.
The French military has said 35 to 75 soldiers were killed, but historians dispute this claim, asserting that nearly 400 people died.
There has been international pressure to exhume the mass graves to verify the official death toll. France has long been accused of falsifying or hiding records, and accounts of the number of casualties have remained unclear.
