TheàFort-Crampel AffairàoràGaud-Toqué Affairàwas a legal scandal in France in 1905 after two colonial officials were accused of arbitrarily executing several native people. This included one execution performed with a cartridge of dynamiteàatàFort Crampel, in what is nowàthe Central African Republic. Both officials accused, Georges Toqué and Fernand Gaud, were sentenced to five years in prison.
Georges Toquéàwas a 24-year-old civil servant trained by theàColonial School.àIn Septemberà1901, he was assigned toàUpper Shari (Haut-Chari)àas a 3rd class colonial administratoràandàwas in charge of the post.
Fernand Gaud was born in 1874. He was a former pharmacy student fromàCarpentras. He was sent to theàFrench Congoàas part of his military service in September 1900. He held various positions inàBangui,àBrazzaville, and thenàFort-Crampel, where he was a 1stàclass clerk for indigenous affairs.àGaud was known to be especially authoritarian and violent the with native people, whom he called niamagoundaàà(âÂÂbush beastâÂÂ). According to him this nickname meant nothing inàthe Yakoma language and he invented it to call his native subordinates "dirty beasts."
OnàJulyà14, 1903, three native people were being held as prisoners at the post ofàFort-Crampel in a grain silo which served temporarily as a cell.àOne of them was Pakpa, who had been arrested two days earlier. He had worked as a guide for Georges Toqué, but the administrator suspected him of treason after an ambush and ordered Fernand Gaud to capture and shoot him.àAfter the arrest, Toqué did not follow through with the execution and locked Pakpa in the silo instead.
Gaud asked if he should release the prisoners in honor of Bastille Day to his superior, Toqué.àToqué ordered the first two to be released. Concerning Pakpa, he said, "Do what you want with him."àBelieving this implied approval, Gaud decided to execute him.àRather than form aàfiring squad, he took a cartridge ofàdynamiteàintended foràblast fishingàfrom his box. He then strapped it to Pakpa with the help of a regional guard, and detonated it. Gaud said during his trial that the dynamite was tied to Pakpa's neck, but other accounts report that it was strapped to the victim's back or anus. Gaud then reported the execution to Toqué, who disapproved of the method of execution but did not punish his subordinate.
At the trial, the defendants recalled that they said before the execution:àâÂÂIt looks stupid;àbut it will stun the natives.àIf they don't keep quietàafter that, fire from Heaven will rain on the black who did not want to befriend the white." Fernand Gaud went on to say that he wanted thoseàaround him to see the absurdity of this death:à"No trace of a rifle shot, no trace of an assegai blow. It's by a kind of miracle that the man who didn't want to make friends with the whites died."
The Ministry of Colonies decided that the trial of Gaud and Toqué should be held inàBrazzaville in order to minimize its media coverage.àThe only journalist present wasàthe correspondent for LeàTemps Félicien Challaye. He accompanied Pierre Savorgnan de Brazza in hisàinvestigation of the crimes.àThe hearing opened onàAugustà21, 1905.
Gaud remained apathetic and claimed to be ill during the trial. Toqué defended himself aggressively and openly denounced the conditions of colonization.àHe admitted to subjecting natives to forced labor for portage or taxàcollection and detaining their families to ensure their obedience. This mistreatment led many native people to die of starvation or disease.àAs there was no judicial institution in Fort-Crampel, Toqué felt he had the power to dispense justice with the approval of his superiors. The charges were numerous.àThe court only seriously considered the facts for which Gaud and Toqué had mutually accused each other during the investigation.àToqué wholly blamed Gaud for the execution of Pakpa; Gaud accused Toqué of ordering the murder of the porter Ndagara by throwing him in the falls of the Nana River. Toqué defended himself by pointing out inconsistencies in Gaud's account and by asserting that Ndagara was assassinated by a regional guard acting on his own.àToqué's account was contradicted by correspondence he exchanged with Gaud where he joked about Ndagara's death.
OnàAugustà26, 1905, the two defendants were each sentenced to five years in prison, benefiting from lenient sentencing.àFernand Gaud was found guilty of the non-premeditated murder of Pakpa, as well as the beatings several native people;àGeorges Toqué was found to be an accomplice in the murder of Ndagara.àThese penalties were perceived as harsh by the white settlers of Brazzaville, who were surprised that so much value was given to the native population.
When news of the events reached Paris in early 1905, the French public and press became engrossed by the scandal.àTheàJournal des Débatsàproposed an administrative inquiry,àand a commission chaired byàPierre Savorgnan de Brazza was appointed.àAlso appointed were: Charles Hoarau-Desruisseaux, Inspector General of the Colonies; Félicien Challaye, a young philosophy professor representing the Ministry of Education; a member of the Colonial Cabinet; and a delegate of theàMinister of Foreign Affairs.àThe commission received an extraordinary budget of 268,000 francs.àOn Aprilà5, 1905, Brazza leftàMarseille and arrived in Librevilleàto begin the investigation on April 29. Brazza discovered the horrors of theàCongo,àespecially inàUbangi-Shari.
The only written account of what he found comes from Félicien Challaye:àwomen and children were abducted and held in prison camps until the husband or father harvested enough rubber.àIn Bangui, the hostages were locked up in the garrison and forced to clean.àWhen the men brought the rubber and the quantity seemed insufficient,àthe hostages are not released. The women paddled alone in canoes, and the Ndris auxiliaries and the regional guards beat them harshly when they stopped. Sixty-six prisoners in Bangui were locked in a six-meter-long hut without light. It was said to reeking of excrement.àIn the first twelve days, twenty-five died and their bodies were thrown into the river.àA newly arrived doctor heard screams and moans, had the hut opened and protested against this brutality.àOnly twenty-one hostages remained.àThe twenty-one remaining survivors were sent back to their villages,àbut several were so weak that they died soon after their release. Near Fort Crampel, Brazza found an abandoned body lying by the side of the path and ordered that it be buried according to custom.àWhen he discovered a concentration campàin Fort Crampel, he collapsed â his moralàpain was compounded by diarrhea.
During this time, Hoarau-Desruisseauxàwas not allowed to meet with Brazza on the false grounds that there was not enough money for travel. This was reflected in Brazza's report No. 148, date August 21, 1905:àâÂÂI have already expressed serious reservations.àI hereby confirm them.àThey were not motivated by the observation of an isolated fact.àDuring my trip, I acquired the very clear feeling that the Department was not kept informed of the real situation in which the native populations find themselves and of the procedures employed in their regard.àEverything was done during my visit to this region to prevent me from learning about it." The young Félicien Challaye was even more severe, feeding the newspaper Le Temps raw, unvarnished articles.àThe Colonial Administration pretended to ignore Brazza out of embarrassment.àAdministrator ÃÂmile Gentilàconsidered returning to France to defend himself,àbut the minister asked him to remain and supervise Brazza.
Feeling weaker and deciding that he has seen enough, Brazza himself decided to return after five months. On the return journey, the severity of his fever finally forced Brazza to stop at the hospital in Libreville. He disembarked the boat after making his recommendationsàto Charles Hoarau-Desruisseaux in order to saveàâÂÂhisâÂÂàCongo andàFranceàfrom shame. Watched over by his wife and by Captain Mangin, doctors determined Brazza did not have long.àAt his request, a photograph of his son Jacques who died two years earlier at the age of five, was placed on the bedside table.àHe died around six o'clock in the evening,àSeptemberà14, 1905, after receiving his last rites.
GeneralÃÂ Charles de Gaulle held Brazza in high esteem. When France was liberated inÃÂ 1944, one of his first acts was to significantly increase his family's pension, who had been living in poverty in Algiers.ÃÂ Only two French people have received a life pension for themselves and their direct descendants:ÃÂ Louis PasteurÃÂ and Brazza.