Batepá massacre

Batepá massacre
Date 3 February 1953
Location Batepá, Mé-Zóchi District, São Tomé Island
Result Protests repelled; beginning of nationalist sentiment
Parties to the civil conflict
Santomean creoles
Portuguese landowners

The Batepá massacre occurred on 3 February 1953 in São Tomé when the colonial administration and Portuguese landowners unleashed a wave of violence against the native creoles known as forros.

Background

Carlos Gorgulho assumed office as governor in 1945. At the time São Tomé was one of the world's largest producers of Cocoa. Large plantations, called roças, occupied the majority of the island's farmland.[1] The roças operated as a quasi-feudal system using contract laborers (serviçais) from Africa and Cape Verde. The forros had always refused manual field work on the estates, since they considered it slave labor. In Gorgulho's assessment the economic modernization polices of the Portuguese Estado Novo regime required breaking São Tomé's dependence on contract laborers from overseas.[2] To accomplish this Gorgulho implemented policies to make it easier for serviçais to return home while at the same time improving conditions on the roças, which he hoped would attract local labor.[3] He also introduced measures targeting the livelihood of the forros such as prohibiting the sale of palm wine and the locally produced gin and raising the poll tax from 30 to 90 escudos; Gorgulho believed these measures would result in the forros taking up wage labor on the roças.[3]

Gorgulho also faced a shortage of labor to carry out his public works and construction projects. The colonial administration used police raids to establish labor gangs to carry out much of this work.[4]

The crisis

Faced with widespread labor shortages, in 1952 the colonial administration proposed settling fifteen thousand people from Cape Verde on São Tomé; then in January 1953 rumors spread that the government would seize the land of the forros to give to newly arrived Cape Verdians and compel the forros to work as contract labor.[5][6] On February 2, 1953, hand-written pamphlets appeared in São Tomé threatening to kill anyone who contracted forros as laborers. The government responded with on official declaration: "The government has been informed that individuals who are hostile towards the present policy, known as communists, are spreading tendentious rumors to the effect that the creoles are to be obliged to contract themselves for the work on the roças like serviçais. The government declares that no creole should give credit to these rumors, but should report such individuals to the police. Thus, the government which has the obligation to protect the creoles, as it has always demonstrated, guarantees them that it will never agree to authorize such contracts."[7] Crowds of protestors gathered on February 3 and the police killed one of them, Manuel da Conceição Soares. His death precipitated a large protest in Trindade the following day.[7]

The massacres

Gorgulho informed colonists and the administration that a communist rebellion was in the offing and he issued a call for all white colonists to take up arms to protect themselves and white women.[8] Militias were quickly formed and some Cape Verdians responded to the call-to-arms. In addition, planters mobilized Angolan and Mozambican workers. Over the next few days the militias and colonial government killed hundreds of forros.[9] Twenty-eight people were suffocated in a cell by the local police, the Corpo de Polícia Indígena (CPI, Indigenous Police Corps); on one estate, twenty people were burned to death.[8] The authorities subjected prisoners to torture using electricity and scores of prisoners died as a result of torture, beatings, and forced labor.[10] The authorities dumped many bodies into the sea. "Throw this shit into the sea to avoid troubles," Gorgulho is quoted as advising.[11]

Aftermath

On March 4 members of the PIDE arrived to conduct an investigation into the alleged communist conspiracy. They quickly concluded there was no such conspiracy and, in April, Sarmento Rodrigues, the Minister of Overseas Territories, ordered Gorgulho to return to Lisbon.[12] He was promoted to the rank of general and praised by the Minister of the Army, General Abranches Pinto, for his actions. Seven forros were tried and convicted for the killing of two police officers.[12]

See also

References

  1. Francisco, Alberto da Boa Morte (2011). Excorcising Devils from the Throne: Sao Tome and Principe. New York, NY: Algora Publishing. p. 25. ISBN 978-0-87586-846-2.
  2. Keese, Alexander (2011). "Early Limits of Local Decolonization in São Tomé and Príncipe: From Colonial Abuses to Postcolonial Disappointment, 1945—1976". The International Journal of African Historical Studies. 44 (3): 389.
  3. 1 2 Seibert, Gerhard (2005). Comrades, Clients and Cousins: Colonialism, Socialism and Democratization in Sao Tome and Principe. Boston: Brill. pp. 66–67.
  4. Seibert, Gerhard (2005). Comrades, Clients and Cousins: Colonialism, Socialism and Democratization in Sao Tome and Principe. Brill. p. 70.
  5. Seibert, Gerhard (2005). Comrades, Clients and Cousins: Colonialism, Socialism and Democratization in Sao Tome and Principe. Boston: Brill. pp. 71–72.
  6. Lloyd-Jones, Stewart (2003). The Last Empire: Thirty Years of Portuguese Decolonization. Intellect. pp. 38–39.
  7. 1 2 Seibert, Gerhard (2005). Comrades, Clients and Cousins: Colonialism, Socialism and Democratization in Sao Tome and Principe. Brill. p. 72.
  8. 1 2 Seibert, Gerhard (2005). Comrades, Clients and Cousins: Colonialism, Socialism and Democratization in Sao Tome and Principe. Boston: Brill. pp. 73–74.
  9. Gallet, Dominique (2008-01-01). São Tomé et Principe: Les îles du milieu du monde (in French). KARTHALA Editions. p. 63. ISBN 9782811100254.
  10. Gallet, Dominique (2008-01-01). São Tomé et Principe: Les îles du milieu du monde (in French). KARTHALA Editions. p. 61. ISBN 9782811100254.
  11. Seibert, Gerhard (2005). Comrades, Clients and Cousins: Colonialism, Socialism, and Democratization in Sao Tome. Boston: Brill. p. 78.
  12. 1 2 Seibert, Gerhard (2005). Comrades, Clients and Cousins: Colonialism, Socialism and Democratization in Sao Tome and Principe. Boston: Brill. pp. 81–82.

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