Momentum for reparations

MP praises ex-BBC aristocrat for “putting her money where her mouth is” on reparations for slavery.

STRUGGLE GOES ON: Extinction Rebellion environmental activists march through the City of London to protest against the companies and institutions that profited from the slave trade (photo: Getty Images)

REPARATIONS IS just not a movement for the “woke” left, but instead a national effort that the whole of Britain needs to be a part of, a leading MP has said.

Clive Lewis, who is vice chair of the Afrikan Reparations All-Party Parliamentary Group, has urged Rishi Sunak and other Tory MPs to acknowledge the devastating legacy of slavery in the Caribbean and for Britain to confront its colonial past. 

The MP for Norwich South told The Voice that he is clear about wanting to see the Prime Minister enter into negotiations with Caribbean leaders.

“There is a change taking place at the moment in the terms of the fact that this has come on the political agenda partly through the work of Laura Trevelyan and her family. Partly now, because the King has also made comments and apologies, which is a critical part of the whole kind of reparations campaign,” he said.

“Now, do I think that’s going to result in Rishi Sunak paying tens of millions…of pounds to the Caribbean? No, but we have to remember, there’s likely to be a general election and a possible change of government.”

“There’s nothing wrong with people being aware of the world around them and aware of history as it actually is, as opposed to the stories that some people in countries tell themselves.”

Clive Lewis MP

The Labour MP continued to praise the efforts of ex-BBC journalist Laura Trevelyan who donated more than £100,000 to Grenada and issued an apology after her aristocratic family were discovered to have owned over 1,000 African slaves on plantations. 

Chairman of Grenada National Reparations Commission (GNRC), Arley Gill, said other European families, governments and institutions should take note of the gesture. 

Mr Lewis, whose own family comes from Grenada, said the now full-time slavery reparations campaigner put her own BBC pension into the compensation when she simply could have said “good luck” to those supporting the movement. 

He added: “Whatever people think of what Laura has done, whether they think it’s tokenism, as far as I’m concerned, she’s put her money where her mouth is.

“There’s nothing on this [movement] for decades, despite Black people campaigning, and all of a sudden, the right white person comes along and says something, and everyone’s interested, and I get that. But that’s not the attitude we should take. The attitude we should take is this is actually strengthening our argument.”

The CARICOM’s ten-point reparations first launched in 2013 has been guiding the Caribbean’s calls for reparatory justice, however, Mr Lewis says that as the movement gains momentum he understands there are “disparate voices” on what reparations actually look like.

In recent months, there has been backlash from institutions who have attempted to make up for their role in slavery without involving the descendants affected by the decision.

The Church of England apologised for their part in the slave trade and promised to invest £100ml to “right their wrongs,” although the sum was not classified as reparations many reparations experts and fellow Caribbeans criticised the move.

Actor David Harewood, whose family hail from Barbados, agreed to have a commissioned portrait of himself hung in Harewood House in North Yorkshire in the family home of aristocrats who once enslaved his ancestors. Many hit back at the decision and argued the stately home should be given to the award-winning actor instead. 

Mr Lewis said that in pushing the movement forward supporters needed to challenge “imperial attitude” from institutions who leave out communities directly impacted by the slave trade. 

The reparations supporter added reparations look different for islands across the Caribbean who have their own individual stories of slavery, including former colonies in South America. 

David Denny, General Secretary of the Caribbean Movement for Peace and Integration in Barbados said the reparations movement has galvanised since the summer of Black Lives Matter protests in 2020 and when Barbados became a republic.

“There are different conditions and different relationships. I could speak more directly to what we in the Caribbean Movement for Peace and Integration, we are demanding reparation from MP Richard Drax,” he said.

“We feel that reparations should have been paid not to any one institution, but that it should be used to develop a very poor and powerless working class in Barbado specifically, in St. George.

“Things like schools can be upgraded, polyclinics can be upgraded to become hospitals with a lot of technical support. Infrastructure in relation to rules can be upgraded, poor people’s houses, upgraded, academic scholarships can be offered to people especially to the very poor, class communities in Barbados.”

Mr Lewis said he is working closely with fellow Labour MP Bell  Ribeiro-Addy on the Afrikan Reparations APPG as the movement builds momentum, adding the group could consider setting up a separate division for Caribbean reparations specifically. 

As the definition of what reparations actually is becomes clearer, Mr Lewis continued that he is also building connections with the CARICOM and other islands in the Caribbean, including the island of his own heritage Grenada. 

“My dad’s over the moon that I’m picking up and running with this [the reparations movement]. My family are very proud that I’m doing this, it’s an opportunity that if it wasn’t for him and the family that came over here, to give me the opportunities and chance to end up in this place to then do that [then I wouldn’t be able to do this]. 

“​​And whilst many of my brothers and sisters don’t haven’t had the same opportunities that I have had, part of the part of the process of being here is to put down the ladder and bring up as many people as possible and challenging this country on the issue of reparations and apology as part of that process.”

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1 Comment

  1. | Chaka Artwell

    If Parliament can always find money for war, and for honouring oppressed minorities not under the jurisdiction of His Majesty’s Parliament.

    It is morally; politically, and ethically unacceptable that African-heritage people, whose ancestor’s two centuries of savage and nasty treatment as Slaves of the English, and Caucasian European Nations, have been denied reparations from England’s Parliament.

    England’s Sir Tony Blair Labour Parliament illegally provided over £2b to destroy Iraq in 2003.

    Parliament has gifted £2b to advance the current war in Ukraine.

    England’s last five Prime Ministers agreed in 2017 to gift £75m to honour Caucasian-Jewish heritage people’s inter-war German oppression; and Parliament has dedicated a day to honour Caucasian-Jewish people suffering.

    Many of His Majesty’s African, and African-Caribbean people have questioned this clear and obnoxious disparity against His Majesty’s African-heritage Subjects.

    England’s African-heritage Subjects are without worthy reparations, because we are also without authentic and dedicated political leadership.

    Reply

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