Léo Pétillon

Léo Pétillon
Minister of the Belgian Congo and Ruanda-Urundi
In office
5 July 1958  6 November 1958
MonarchBaudouin
Prime MinisterGaston Eyskens
Preceded byAuguste Buisseret
Succeeded byMaurice Van Hemelrijck
Governor-General of the Belgian Congo
In office
1 January 1952  12 July 1958
MonarchBaudouin
Preceded byEugène Jungers
Succeeded byHendrik Cornelis
Governor of Ruanda-Urundi
In office
19 July 1949  1 January 1952
MonarchsPrince Charles (to 1950)
Leopold III (1950–51)
Baudouin (from 1951)
Governor GeneralEugène Jungers
Preceded byMaurice Simon
Succeeded byAlfred Claeys-Boúúaert
Personal details
Born
Léon Antoine Marie Pétillon

(1903-05-22)22 May 1903
Esneux, Province of Liège, Belgium
Died1 April 1996(1996-04-01) (aged 92)
Ixelles, Brussels, Belgium

Léo Pétillon (22 May 1903 1 April 1996) was a Belgian colonial civil servant and lawyer who served as Governor-General of the Belgian Congo (1952–58) and, briefly, as Minister of the Belgian Congo and Ruanda-Urundi (1958).

Pétillon studied Law and practiced as a lawyer, before entering the Belgian colonial service in 1929. He worked for several years at the Ministry of the Colonies in Brussels, serving as aide to a series of ministers. In 1939, he secured a posting to the Belgian Congo as aide to the Governor-General and spent most of World War II in the colony or with the Belgian government in exile in London. In 1946, Pétillon was promoted to Vice Governor-General, given responsibility for the Belgian mandate of Ruanda-Urundi. In 1952, he was promoted to the position of Governor-General himself, holding the position until 1958. After the end of his tenure, he briefly held a Ministerial position himself as technocrat in the government of Gaston Eyskens. He retired in 1959 and published several books. He died in 1996.