Zimbabwe News Update

🇿🇼 Published: 13 March 2026
📘 Source: The Citizen

A traditional dancer performs in front of the crate containing the Djidji Ayokwe drum, also known as the talking drum, that was looted by French colonial troops from Ivory Coast in 1916, as it arrives during the latest repatriation of stolen artefacts at the Félix Houphouët-Boigny International Airport in Abidjan on March 13, 2026. Picture: Issouf Sanogo / AFP The Djidji Ayokwe “talking drum”, which was looted by French colonial troops in 1916 and taken to France, arrived back in Ivory Coast Friday, in the latest repatriation of stolen artefacts. The wooden drum, more than three metres (10 feet) long and weighing 430 kilos (950 pounds), was used by the Ebrie tribe to transmit messages.

It was officially handed over on February 20 after France’s parliament approved removing the artefact from the national museum collections to enable its return. Ivory Coast had asked in late 2018 for the return of the Djidji Ayokwe among 148 works of art taken during the colonial period. It arrived aboard a specially chartered plane at Ivory Coast’s main city Abidjan and remained inside a huge wooden crate stamped “fragile”, AFP journalists saw.

“It’s an historic day and I feel deep emotion,” Culture Minister Francoise Remarck said, welcoming its arrival at the airport, where the Ebrie community also sang and played drums. “We are living a moment of justice and remembrance,” the minister added. French President Emmanuel Macron promised in 2021 to send the drum and other artefacts back home to the west African country.

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It is one of hundreds of objects France is preparing to send back to Africa, with the efforts set to be accelerated by the passing of a new law to authorise mass repatriations. “We are happy and relieved to know that this sacred piece of our culture is back on its native land,” Aboussou Guy Georges Mobio, an Ebrie village chief, told AFP.

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Originally published by The Citizen • March 13, 2026

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