Botswana Guardian

Europe must pay Africa reparation­s for slave trade, says Akufo- Addo

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President Nana Akufo- Addo of Ghana has urged European nations to pay reparation­s to Africa for damage wrought by the historic slave trade.

“The effects of the Slave Trade have been devastatin­g to the African continent and to the African Diaspora, with the entire period of slavery stifling Africa’s economic, cultural and psychologi­cal progress.

“It is now time to revive and intensify the discussion­s about reparation­s for Africa. Indeed, the time is long overdue,” the president told a summit on the theme in Accra.

Calls for reparation­s for damage wrought by the slave trade have been growing in recent years, and have been given impetus by the global Black

Lives Matter movement for racial justice. Proponents argue that slavery wrought a devastatin­g economic legacy that stymied the developmen­t of former slave colonies and the countries from which slaves were forcibly removed.

Modern- day Ghana was a major exit point for millions of slaves forced to endure the brutal Middle Passage to the United States, West Indies and South America.

Millions of Africans snatched in the interior on the orders of European agents were trafficked to coastal slave forts – including Ghana’s notorious Cape Coast Castle with its “gate of no return” – before they were loaded onto ships and sold in the Americas.

It is thought that around 2m slaves may have died on the Middle Passage.

Akufo- Addo compared the lack of reparation­s paid to Africa to the enormous compensati­on paid to British, French and American slaveholde­rs when the trade was finally outlawed in those countries.

“When the British ended slavery, all the owners of enslaved Africans received reparation­s to the tune of twenty million pounds sterling, the equivalent today of twenty billion pounds sterling, but enslaved Africans themselves did not receive a penny.

“Likewise in the United States, owners of slaves received three hundred dollars for every slave they owned; the slaves themselves received nothing.

“Indeed, in the case of Haiti, the country had to pay reparation­s amounting to twenty- one billion dollars ($ 21 billion) to French slaveholde­rs in 1825 for the victory of the great Haitian Revolution, the first in the Americas and the Caribbean which freed the slaves.”

Akufo- Addo argued that Africans should be compensate­d in a similar way to the victims of other historic atrocities.

“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.

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

Addo also said that European nations must formally apologise for the trauma of slavery.

“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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