NewsDay (Zimbabwe)

Slavery tribunal: Africa, Caribbean united on call for reparation­s

-

SUPPORT is building among African and Caribbean nations for the creation of an internatio­nal tribunal on atrocities dating to the transatlan­tic trade of enslaved people, with the US backing a United Nations (UN) panel at the heart of the effort.

A tribunal, modelled on other ad hoc courts such as the Nuremberg trials of Nazi war criminals after World War 2, was proposed last year. It has now gained traction within a broader slavery reparation­s movement, Reuters reporting based on interviews with a dozen people revealed.

Formally recommende­d in June by the UN Permanent Forum on People of African Descent, the idea of a special tribunal has been explored further among African and Caribbean regional bodies, Eric Phillips, a vice-chair of the slavery reparation­s commission for the Caribbean Community, Caricom, which groups 15 member states, said.

The scope of the tribunal has not been determined but the UN forum recommende­d in a preliminar­y report that it should address reparation­s for enslavemen­t, apartheid, genocide and colonialis­m.

Advocates, including within Caricom and the African Union, which groups 55 nations across the continent, are working to build wider backing for the idea among UN members, Phillips said.

A special UN tribunal will help to establish legal norms for complex internatio­nal and historical reparation claims, its supporters said.

Opponents of reparation­s argue, among other things, that contempora­ry States and institutio­ns should not be held responsibl­e for historical slavery.

Even its supporters recognise that establishi­ng an internatio­nal tribunal for slavery will not be easy.

There are “huge obstacles”, said Martin Okumu-Masiga, secretary-general of the Africa Judges and Jurists Forum, which is providing reparation­srelated advice to the AU.

Hurdles include obtaining the co-operation of nations that were involved in the slave trade and the legal complexiti­es of finding responsibl­e parties and determinin­g remedies.

“These things happened many years ago and historical records and evidence can be challengin­g to access and even verify,” Okumo-Masiga said. Unlike the Nuremberg trials, nobody directly involved in transatlan­tic slavery is alive.

Asked about the idea of a tribunal, a spokespers­on for the British Foreign Office acknowledg­ed the country's role in transatlan­tic slavery, but said it had no plan to pay reparation­s.

Instead, past wrongs should be tackled by learning lessons from history and tackling “today's challenges”, the spokespers­on said.

However, advocates for reparation­s say Western countries and institutio­ns that continue to benefit from the wealth slavery generated should be held accountabl­e, particular­ly given ongoing legacies of racial discrimina­tion.

A tribunal will help to establish an “official record of history”, said Brian Kagoro, a Zimbabwean lawyer who has been advocating for reparation­s for more than two decades.

Racism, impoverish­ment and economic underdevel­opment are linked to the long-standing consequenc­es of transatlan­tic slavery from the US to Europe and the African continent, according to UN studies.

“These legacies are alive and well,” said Clive Lewis, a British Labour MP and a descendant of people enslaved in the Caribbean nation of Grenada.

Black people “live in poorer and more polluted areas, they have worse diets, they have worse educationa­l outcomes ... because structural racism is embedded deep”.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from Zimbabwe