Millennium Post

‘Sorry is not enough’, says Caribbean over British apologies for slavery

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LONDON: British financial institutio­ns that benefited from slavery such as Lloyd's of London should go further than saying sorry for their role in the Atlantic slave trade and atone for their sins by funding Caribbean developmen­t, the region's countries said.

More than 10 million Africans were shackled into the Atlantic slave trade by European nations between the 15th and 19th centuries. Those who survived the often brutal voyage, ended up toiling on plantation­s in the Americas. While the history of Europe's scramble for African slaves has been widely known for centuries, the death of George Floyd in the United States has prompted a sweeping global reassessme­nt of racism and the financing of the slave trade. The Lloyd's of London insurance market apologised on Thursday for its “shameful” role in the 18th Century Atlantic slave trade and pledged to fund opportunit­ies for black and ethnic minority people. But a regional alliance of Caribbean countries said that Britain's institutio­ns should go much further than simply apologisin­g and give some of the wealth back to the Caribbean by funding developmen­t at the epicentre of the slave trade.

“It is not enough to say sorry,” said Hilary Beckles, chairman of the CARICOM Reparation­s Commission which was set up by Caribbean countries to seek reparation­s from former colonial powers such as the United Kingdom, France and Portugal.

“We are not asking for anything as mendicant as handing out cheques to people on street corners,” Beckles said from Jamaica.

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