Saturday, December 6, 2025

Latest

How French troops murdered hundreds of their comrades in WWII

Senegal history opinion
Image – Google Maps.

More than 300 African soldiers were executed by the French colonial army in Thiaroye, Senegal.

More than 81 years after the events, the truth is resurfacing from the soil of Thiaroye, Senegal. Recent archaeological excavations have unearthed bullets, bones, and human remains, confirming what Africans have known all along: the Thiaroye massacre of 1944 was never a “mistake,” but a premeditated colonial crime deliberately covered up.

According to a 2025 report from ongoing excavations on the Thiaroye site, more than 300 African soldiers were executed by the French colonial army, even though official figures long mentioned only 35 deaths.

A Senegalese research committee led by historian Mamadou Diouf confirmed, during a press conference in Dakar on October 17, that French military records were deliberately falsified. Departure lists, troop numbers, and casualty counts were altered to conceal the true scale of the massacre.

“Colonial archives show massive manipulation,” Diouf said, adding that the French army and colonial administration had “organized silence.”

This was not a tragic accident but a carefully engineered disinformation campaign that lasted for generations.

The December 1944 massacre

On December 1, 1944, at the Thiaroye military camp near Dakar, over 1,300 African tirailleurs (riflemen) veterans returning from Europe were waiting for their demobilization and back pay. These men, taken from their villages by colonial France, had fought on some of the deadliest fronts in Italy, Provence, and Alsace. They faced Nazi bullets to defend a country that was not their own. Yet once the war ended, the Republic they had helped save denied them the most basic dignity: that of soldiers.

Instead of a hero’s welcome, the tirailleurs were interned at Thiaroye as suspects, disarmed, humiliated, and treated like rebels. Their meager allowances were cut, wages unpaid, or converted at unfair rates. When they dared to demand their due, the French army responded with violence. On the night of November 30 to December 1, 1944, under orders from General Yves de Boisboissel, French troops surrounded the camp. At dawn, on a simple order, machine guns opened fire on these unarmed veterans. Witnesses reported a scene of horror: men shot in their beds, others executed while trying to flee, and wounded soldiers finished off at point-blank range. Bodies were hastily buried in mass graves to erase traces of the massacre.

The official count stated 35 dead, reducing the massacre to a mere “mutiny.” But archives, survivor accounts, and especially the archaeological excavations revealed the truth: over 300 bullet-riddled skeletons were exhumed at Thiaroye, confirming earlier testimonies. Some bones still bore traces of chains or blows, proving that some soldiers were beaten before execution.

Historians such as Mamadou Diouf and Armelle Mabon note that this slaughter was also a warning to all African veterans: demanding rights in the colonial empire meant challenging the racial hierarchy. A report submitted to the Senegalese presidency in October 2025 described the event as “planned and covered by the French military hierarchy,” while recovered archives prove that some evidence was deliberately falsified or destroyed.

For the families of the tirailleurs, the increased count of victims and the archaeological evidence strengthen their demand for justice. For decades, they have demanded official recognition, an independent investigation, reparations, and the return of identified bodies. In August 2024, the French government officially recognized the event as a “massacre.” However, many families consider this recognition purely symbolic: no complete judicial investigation has yet been conducted, the officers involved have never been tried, and access to French military archives remains restricted. Institutional silence, they say, prolongs the historical injustice inflicted on their ancestors.

Contribution denied

The racism fueling France during World War II was not limited to attitudes or language; it was embedded in political and military decisions. Despite the decisive participation of thousands of African soldiers from Senegal, Chad, Cameroon, Congo, Mali in the liberation of French territory, colonial France refused to grant them recognition or equality. When it came time to celebrate victory, the French state deliberately erased them, revealing institutional racism and the myth of a “white and victorious” France.

What is known as the “whitening of colonial troops” (blanchiment) perfectly illustrates this racial policy. In the summer of 1944, as the Free French Forces advanced toward Paris after liberating southern France, the French high command ordered that black soldiers be replaced by white ones before the triumphant entry into the capital. Entire units composed of African tirailleurs were “purged”: Senegalese tirailleurs were withdrawn from the front and replaced with European or ‘whiter’ North African troops. This racial cover-up was a political operation: erasing African contribution to French freedom to preserve imperial prestige and a racial hierarchy shaken by the 1940 defeat.

Modern France now protests against migrants, yet it forgets that it once sent ships to Africa to recruit over 550,000 men to die in European trenches. Our ancestors were the cannon fodder of the Republic: first to die, last to be paid, and the only ones massacred by their own allies.

Thiaroye is not only a tragedy, it is a symbol of state lies, erased memory, and justice continually denied. This massacre reveals the hidden face of a Republic that proclaims human rights while denying them to those who defended it. From Setif to Madagascar, from Cameroon to Algeria, African blood was shed in the name of “civilization.”

It is no longer enough to “commemorate” Thiaroye with flowers and empty speeches. What families demand and what Africa deserves is total truth and genuine justice. The recently discovered mass graves must be opened and identified under international supervision; colonial archives must be fully declassified; and those responsible, even posthumously, must be publicly named.

France should abandon its vague expressions of “regret” and formally acknowledge the Thiaroye massacre as an unforgivable crime against humanity. Only then can moral and historical repair truly begin. Reparations must go beyond money: they must be political, educational, and memorial, so that the truth of Thiaroye appears in schoolbooks, museums, and diplomacy, both in France and across Africa.

Support DTNZ

DTNZ is committed to bringing Kiwis independent, not-for-profit news. We're up against the vast resources of the legacy mainstream media. Help us in the battle against them by donating today.

Source:RT News

No login required to comment. Name, email and web site fields are optional. Please keep comments respectful, civil and constructive. Moderation times can vary from a few minutes to a few hours. Comments may also be scanned periodically by Artificial Intelligence to eliminate trolls and spam.

4 COMMENTS

  1. Never trust a frog
    An incident in WW1 that not many have heard of is when the French army clambered into taxi’s and headed to the front line
    During the First Battle of the Marne in September 1914, hundreds of Parisian taxis were commandeered to transport French troops to the front lines. This dramatic and symbolic episode became known as the “Taxis of the Marne.”
    🚕 What Happened
    – Date: Night of September 6–7, 1914
    – Context: German forces were advancing rapidly toward Paris. The French 6th Army needed urgent reinforcement.
    – Action: General Joseph Gallieni, military governor of Paris, ordered the mobilization of about 600 Renault taxis to carry approximately 5,000 soldiers from Paris to the front near the River Ourcq, 30 miles away.
    – Logistics: Each taxi carried five soldiers. Drivers were paid 27% of the meter fare. The convoy assembled at Les Invalides and moved under cover of night.
    🧠 Symbolic Impact
    – Military effect: The actual tactical impact was limited—only a small fraction of troops were moved this way—but it helped bolster the French counterattack that halted the German advance.
    – Psychological effect: The event became a powerful symbol of national unity and civilian contribution, showing Paris mobilizing itself to defend the homeland.
    – Legacy: The “Taxis of the Marne” are commemorated in museums and military lore as a moment when ordinary infrastructure became a tool of resistance.
    Sources:
    Smithsonian Magazine
    WorldWar1.com
    Musée de l’Armée
    Out of interest

  2. Several more non-white soldiers forcibly recruited from Britain’s colonies were exploited by British colonialism in many more wars without recognition.

  3. Yea, males never miss an opportunity to kill each others.
    This time being ” frogs”. The “roastbeefs” another time or tribal africans when the opportunity presents itself. Just look at the state of the world.

  4. “Senegalese tirailleurs were withdrawn from the front and replaced with European or ‘whiter’ North African troops”
    This must really hurt, not just the Senegalese but all the good looking humans who are sidelined and replaced with fake heroes.

LEAVE A REPLY

Please enter your comment!
Please enter your name here

Wellington
broken clouds
16.6 ° C
17 °
16.4 °
91 %
10.3kmh
75 %
Sat
18 °
Sun
19 °
Mon
19 °
Tue
19 °
Wed
19 °




Sponsored



Trending

Sport

Daily Life

Opinion