Woman Protest And Set Herself On Fire

The horrifying sight which traumatized shoppers and office workers in the
centre of Luxembourg City last week has now been labelled as a protest against
racism. The Belgian woman of Congolese origin who set herself alight in the
middle of Place d’Armes told witnesses that she was doing it to protest against
racism, moments before she carried out the desperate act which has left her in
hospital fighting for her life.
Maggy Delvaux-Mufu, a mother of three in her forties, alerted several national
newspapers late on Tuesday morning last week that she would be burning herself
alive on place des Martyrs at 12.45 am, before setting out accompanied by her
husband to walk through the centre of town to her macabre rendezvous. The police
were alerted and officers were deployed to the Rousegärtchen.
But the woman changed her plan when she came across a group of journalists
gathered to cover an event organised by the ‘Mouvement écologique’ on Place
d’Armes, opposite the Cercle municipal. She soaked herself in petrol before
confronting the members of the press, announcing that she was about to sacrifice
her life to protest against racism. Moments later, she struck a match, turning
herself into a human torch in front of hundreds of people.
Delvaux-Mufu’s husband and passers-by jumped on the burning body, attempting to
stifle the flames with coats and jackets. The scene made several people feel
unwell and many witnesses who filled the square at lunchtime were traumatised by
the woman’s shrieking screams of unimaginable pain. The flames were already
extinguished when police, rescue services and the fire brigade arrived at the
scene. One person is reported to have vomited after seeing the woman being
transported into an ambulance. The events in Place d’Armes have also started a
controversy regarding the authorities’ lack of psychological support for
witnesses.
Delvaux-Mufu was taken to the Bon Secours hospital in Metz, where she is being
treated in a specialised ward for burns and is fighting for her life. Grand
Duchess Maria Teresa visited the woman and her family at the hospital last week.
RTL television was the first to run a news flash about the incident on its
website on Tuesday afternoon last week. 352 reported the bulletin in its news in
brief section, shortly before going to print. Events preceding the incident only
came to light later on in the week.
The 42-year-old Belgian citizen and her husband had been facing financial
difficulties. They had recently indebted themselves by buying a Citroën garage
in Oberwampach, before realising they were missing the documents that would
allow them to set up a business. Delvaux-Mufu wrote a letter to Le Jeudi
recounting her story of bureaucratic difficulties and economic despair. “I’m
against all forms of violence, but day after day, my family and I have to endure
moral violence, discrimination, insults and much more from Mr Juncker’s
administration”, she said in the letter published last week.
Money problems had driven the woman to desperately plead her case at the Prime
minister’s office early on the same day of the incident. Her threat to burn
herself alive on Place des Martyrs after being turned away by the authorities
caused government officials to contact the police. A city-wide search was
organised, but nobody could foresee the woman would change her plans."

