During earlier hearings, the French publisher Casterman and Belgian rights holders to the 24 books in the Tintin series denied it was racist but merely an example of "kind paternalism". Lawyers likened the proposed ban to "taking a knife" to "Dickens on the Jews, Jules Verne on the black population or the Bible's attitude towards women".
The row over the book, first serialised between in 1930 when Herge - real name Georges Remi - was 23 and had never left his native land, has simmered relentlessly in the intervening decades.
The artist himself was said to be unhappy with some of the depictions, which include Africans bowing to the young boy and removed some of the references in a later working. It was only published in English in 1991 but the racism row was rekindled last year following the release of Steven Spielberg's film The Adventures of Tintin, when it emerged that the book was being sold in a sealed wrapper.
Publishers Egmont UK included the warning: "In his portrayal of the Belgian Congo, the young Herge reflects the colonial attitudes of the time... he depicted the African people according to the bourgeois, paternalistic stereotypes of the period - an interpretation that some of today's readers may find offensive."
Tintin has long been emblematic of the era of exploitation in Africa. The Democratic Republic of Congo (DRC) was a Belgian colony between 1908 and 1960. In 2004 a DRC spokesman hit back at Belgian ministerial criticism describing it as: "Tintin in the Congo all over again."
- THE INDEPENDENT