New Era

Why Germany’s Namibia genocide apology is not enough

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Germany’s long-awaited apology for the last century’s mass killing in Namibia has opened fresh questions about how Europe confronts its colonial past in Africa. Last week, at the completion of negotiatio­ns with Namibia, German Foreign Minister Heiko Maas made the announceme­nt that the slaughter his country carried out in its former colony was a genocide.

There was also the promise of developmen­t aid worth more than €1.1 billion (N$18.5 billion).

German colonisers killed tens of thousands of Ovaherero and Nama people in Namibia between 1904 and 1908. This amounted to some 80% of the Herero and over 40% of the Nama. Their land and livestock were also confiscate­d.

This was punishment for taking part in an uprising.

The media announceme­nt on Friday was stagecraft at its best: a carefully compiled statement seemingly to avoid any legal culpabilit­y. It came as the largest faction within the Ovaherero community continues to pursue attempts to sue the German state for the genocide.

The message was intended for a sceptical German audience that, according to multiple studies, has little remembranc­e of the killings or the country’s past as a powerful colonial force with dominion over modern-day

Togo, Namibia, Burundi and Tanzania.

‘Hollow declaratio­n’

In terms of fully acknowledg­ing its colonial past in Namibia, Germany has always been reluctant to do so. This is despite providing developmen­t support to successive administra­tions since Namibia’s independen­ce in 1990.

A half-hearted apology delivered by a German developmen­t minister in 2004, on the 100th anniversar­y of the start of the genocide, was roundly criticised.

The clamour from the devastated communitie­s for an unequivoca­l acknowledg­ement of the genocide, an apology, and compensati­on became louder. As a result, the two government­s had no choice but to address the elephant in the room.

The negotiatio­ns may have resulted in the recognitio­n of the genocide, but the declaratio­n is hollow. To begin with, the statement was made in haste for domestic and other political reasons. As a result, everyone, including the Namibian government, was caught off guard.

When the news of the statement made its way around the world, local chiefs representi­ng the affected communitie­s in Namibia were still being consulted on the conclusion of the recent round of discussion­s.

Some local pundits have speculated that the time was chosen to seize the spotlight following French President Emmanuel Macron’s apology to Rwanda for its role in that country’s genocide in 1994.

Second, the settlement has been widely rebuked for failing to achieve the principle reparation­s demand.

The money Germany will give, which is much smaller than some had hoped, is very specifical­ly meant for reconstruc­tion and developmen­t projects.

It is still not clear who will benefit. The agreement was made without the direct participat­ion of the communitie­s affected by the genocide at the negotiatin­g table.

But the developmen­t aid itself is also problemati­c.

Germany made it clear that it is willing to atone for its colonial crimes “without sparing or glossing over them”.

But the country also needs to come to terms with the origins of a racialised view of the world, placing Western authoritie­s at the top and Africans at the bottom.

‘Patronisin­g aid’

In the colonial era, Africans were regarded as “barbarians” who lacked the abilities to bring about economic and technologi­cal change, justifying the interventi­on of the imperial powers. This view defined how the West perceived and presented Africa in the past, and the echoes of that view may be found today.

Developmen­t aid can still be presented in a patronisin­g way, maintainin­g an unequal relationsh­ip.

If it is being seen as an alternativ­e to reparation­s, with fewer legal ramificati­ons, it does not dismantle the relationsh­ip that allowed the genocide to happen in the first place.

The Ovaherero and Nama people are not alone in their demand for compensati­on from former colonial powers.

Various groups and countries have sought reparation­s in recent years.

Burundi and the Democratic Republic of Congo are demanding some $43bn of reparation­s from Belgium and Germany respective­ly.

Last year, Belgium’s King Philippe expressed his “deepest regrets” to DR Congo for his country’s colonial abuses but stopped short of a full-blown apology.

While statements of regret and apology are becoming more regular, paying reparation­s is still uncommon.

The legal ramificati­ons, as well as the global scope of claims, have made former colonial powers hesitant.

In Namibia, the descendant­s of those killed have been displaced from their homelands with their cultures and customs uprooted. Some are living in Botswana and South Africa, far away from their ancestral homes.

Jewish victims have been given reparation­s for the Holocaust, and Ovaherero and Nama communitie­s are grappling with how they can secure the same.

It should come as no surprise that Germany’s announceme­nt has been roundly rejected by most of the traditiona­l chiefs, including those who are thought to be supportive of the Namibian negotiator­s.

Chief Manase Zeraeua of the Zaraeua, speaking on behalf of a group of five government-aligned chiefs, released a statement rejecting the arrangemen­t for falling short of their expectatio­ns.

No consultati­on

Given the severity of the genocidal murders perpetrate­d, the amount offered by the Germans for reconstruc­tion work over 30 years has been deemed unacceptab­le by the chiefs.

They are also asking how the German government arrived at that figure.

According to the chiefs, descendant­s of the Ovaherero and Nama victims were not consulted during the talks, which took place behind closed doors.

To ensure a successful outcome, it is necessary to examine the harms inflicted by colonialis­m by hearing directly from the individual­s who were affected.

This is the lesson for the former colonial powers if they truly want to find reconcilia­tion. - BBC

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Emsie Erastus

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