Madagascar to receive human remains from ex-colonial ruler France

Madagascar requested that France return King Toera's remains and those of two chiefs from the Sakalava ethnic group.

One-third of the estimated 30,000 biological specimens held in Paris's anthropological museum, the Musee de l'Homme, are skulls and skeletons. / Photo: AP
AP

One-third of the estimated 30,000 biological specimens held in Paris's anthropological museum, the Musee de l'Homme, are skulls and skeletons. / Photo: AP

The culture ministers of France and Madagascar have taken the first step toward repatriating human remains taken from the Indian Ocean island while under French colonial rule.

On Thursday, a joint scientific committee will review, Madagascar's request that France return the skull of King Toera, beheaded by troops during the early days of colonisation.

The review is the first of its kind since France voted in December 2023 to facilitate the restitution of human remains held in its public collections.

"France wants to respond to this expectation," Culture Minister Rachida Dati told reporters, alongside her Madagascan counterpart Volamiranty Donna Mara.

These remains are "of crucial importance" to the Malagasy people, Mara said.

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'Act of reconciliation'

Madagascar declared independence in 1960 after more than 60 years of French colonial rule.

The committee will issue an opinion to the French government, which will then decide on returning King Toera's remains and those of two chiefs from Madagascar's Sakalava ethnic group, all currently held in the country's natural history museum in Paris.

France has voted on several laws in recent years aimed at returning artefacts held in its museums to their original countries or owners.

The country's parliament passed a law streamlining the return of art looted by Nazis to their Jewish owners or heirs the same year it voted to facilitate the repatriation of human remains.

"This is an act of reconciliation," said MP Christophe Marion when he presented the bill to return ancestral remains to France's lower house of parliament last November.

One-third of the estimated 30,000 biological specimens held in Paris's anthropological museum, the Musee de l'Homme, are skulls and skeletons.

But a third law enabling the return of property taken during the colonial era has not been finalised amid a right-wing backlash in parliament earlier this year.

"We need to put these issues back on the table," Dati said, adding that "these are important issues" for healing historical wounds.

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