Ghana joins Caribbean in reparation demands

Ghana President Akufo-Addo contrasts lack of reparations for enslavement to the awarding of reparations for other atrocities

THE PRESIDENT of Ghana has led calls for reparations for slavery across Africa and the African diaspora as the latest country to join the Caribbean in demands for reparatory justice. 

President Akufo-Addo addressed crowds at the Reparations and Racial Healing Summit this week and said that atoning for the horrors of the trans-Atlantic slave trade had been “long overdue.”

He called for demands to be heightened in the fight for reparations which Caribbean nations like Grenada, Antigua and Barbuda and Jamaica have done off the back of the Royals tour of the region earlier this year and blasted the “doubled standard” for other ethnic groups impacted by colonial powers.

“It is time for Africa, 20 million of whose sons and daughters had their freedoms curtailed and sold into slavery, also to receive reparations,” he said.

“Reparations for Africa and the African Diaspora are long overdue. Predictably, the question of reparation becomes a debate only when it comes to Africa and Africans. We believe the calls for reparations for Africa are just.

“Native Americans have received and continue to receive reparations; Japanese-American families, who were incarcerated in internment camps in America during World War II, received reparations. Jewish people, six million of whom perished in the concentration camps of Hitlerite Germany, received reparations, including homeland grants and support.”

The Ghana president faced backlashed for his comments as critics claimed it was an attempt to distract from Ghana’s worsening economic problems.

However, the President hit back at the claims and said the legacy of slavery has been “devastating” to the continent and the diaspora, which tampered “Africa’s economic, cultural and psychological progress”.

Mr Addo went onto slam the £20ml loan that compensated formed slave owners when the Slavery Abolition Loan act came into force in 1833, which left many of the African dispoara in Britain unwittingly paying of a loan that left them and their ancestors penniles.

In 1825, reparations were also paid to French slaveholders from Haiti after the Haitian Revolution to amount worth $21bn. 

Although, he stressed that money alone could not restore the endemic damage of slavery he said that “nevertheless, it is now time to revive and intensify the discussions about reparations for Africa. Indeed, the time is long overdue.

He added: “And, even before these discussions on reparations conclude, the entire continent of Africa deserves a formal apology from the European nations involved in the slave trade for the crimes and damage it has caused to the population, psyche, image and character of the African the world over.”

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1 Comment

  1. | Chaka Artwell

    All of Her Majesty’s African-Caribbean and African Subjects need to comprehend and understand the reason the United Nation’s 2001 World Conference against Racism; with its specific resolution calling for Reparations from the Caucasian-European nations, who held African people as slaves for three hundred years, was defeated was due to the action of Baroness Valerie Amos.

    Baroness Valerie Amos had greater loyalty to then Prime Minister Blair; and she used her privilege and authority and vetoed the Conference’s Reparation resolution.
    Baroness Amos vetoing of the U.N. Reparations resolution deeply hurt the Conference’s African and Caribbean-heritage delegates.

    Baroness Amos has been well rewarded for destroying the UN 2001 call for Reparation for the descendants of the enslaved.

    It is an outrage that Her Majesty’s Parliament in 2017 gifted £75m of public money to honour the Caucasian-Jewish people’s interwar oppression; whilst Her Majesty’s Parliament continues to oppose reparations to the African people England Enslaved for two hundred years.

    The wealth gained by the violent and brutal enslavement of African people made possible England’s industrial revolution.

    The call for reparations from President Akufo-Addo of Ghana, must be supported by all of Her Majesty’s African-Heritage Subjects and Voice Readers.

    Reply

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