
Family tree of Jean-Paul Harroy
Belgian, Dutch, Luxembourger and Swiss politician
Born Jean-Paul Jules Elisée Dugnoille Harroy
Belgian colonial civil servant who served as the last Governor and only Resident-General of Ruanda-Urundi
Born on May 4, 1909 in Schaerbeek, Bruxelles-Capitale , Belgium
Died on July 8, 1995 in Ixelles, Bruxelles-Capitale , Belgium
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... Jean-Paul Harroy (4 May 1909 – 8 July 1995) was a Belgian colonial civil servant who served as the last Governor and only Resident-General of Ruanda-Urundi. His term coincided with the Rwandan Revolution and the assassination of the popular Burundian political leader Prince Louis Rwagasore. It has been alleged that Harroy may have been implicated in the murder.
Education and career
Jean-Paul Harroy studied at the Solvay Business School from which he graduated as a business engineer in 1931. In 1936, he obtained a degree in colonial sciences at the Free University of Brussels and in 1946 the title of doctor in colonial sciences. His thesis addressed soil erosion in Central Africa and was entitled Afrique, terre qui meurt, la dégradation des sols africains sous l'influence de la colonisation ("Africa, a dying land: The Degradation of African Soils under the Influence of Colonization"). This thesis had a certain international impact, both in the United States and in the Soviet Union, and Harroy was widely seen as a leading expert on applied ecology in Africa.
From 1932 to 1935 Jean-Paul Harroy worked in the family company before being appointed to manage the Institut des Parcs Nationaux du Congo belge, a precursor of the Institut Congolais pour la Conservation de la Nature. From 1948 to 1955, Jean-Paul Harroy was the first secretary-general of the International Union for Protection of Nature, later to become the International Union for Conservation of Nature (IUCN).
Controversy and the assassination of Prince Louis Rwagasore
Harroy arrived in Ruanda-Urundi in 1955 and served as the territory's Governor in addition to being the Vice Governor-General of the Belgian Congo. Following Urundi's formal request for independence on 20 January 1959, Urundi's first democratic elections took place on 8 September 1961. These elections were won by the Union for National Progress, a multi-ethnic unity party led by Prince Louis Rwagasore, which won just over 80 percent of the electorate's votes. In the wake of the elections, on 13 October, Rwagasore was assassinated. The assassination was planned by members of the pro-Belgian Christian Democratic Party (PDC). Rwagasore had been a notable critic of Harroy's administration. Prior to his execution, the assassin Jean (Ioannis) Kageorgis explicitly accused Harroy and Roberto Régnier of responsibility in the murder.
René Lemarchand has written that "Harroy is seen by many Barundi as the incarnation of the devil. A more measured assessment suggests that he will probably go down in history as one of the most irresponsible and inept colonial civil servants to preside over the dissolution of colonial rule in Africa."
Later life
Following his rule as Governor-General of Ruanda-Urundi, Harroy went on to work as a professor at Free University of Brussels. He published memoirs recounting his colonial service in 1987. He died in 1995 at Ixelles, a suburb of Brussels.
Authography
Burundi, 1955–1962: Souvenirs d'un combattant d'une guerre perdue (1987)
Rwanda, de la féodalité à la démocratie (1955-1962). Bruxelles, éditions Hayez, 1984. 512 p.
References
External links
Archive Jean-Paul Harroy, Royal museum for central Africa
Biography from Wikipedia (see original) under licence CC BY-SA 3.0
Geographical origins
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