Stabroek News

Jamaica to get millions in reparation funding from UK Guardian Trust

- Gleaner)

(Jamaica

Jamaica and other regions are set to benefit from millions of pounds in “substantia­l” restorativ­e justice funding over the next decade after the sole shareholde­r in the United Kingdom, Guardian Group, apologised for the media company’s links to transatlan­tic slavery.

Tuesday’s apology coincided with The Guardian’s disclosure of academic research tying the newspaper’s founding financial backers to slavery.

The quantum of proposed compensati­on to Jamaica was not declared, but the Scott Trust said that it expects to invest more than £10 million (US$12.3 million) in restorativ­e justice support for descendant communitie­s in the Caribbean nation, as well as the southeaste­rn United States’ Sea Islands/Gullah Geechee.

The research findings showed that much of the wealth of founder, journalist and cotton merchant John Edward Taylor, and other financiers, was derived from chattel slavery.

Sir George Phillips, one of 11 Guardian investors in Manchester’s cotton and textiles industry tied to slavery, co-owned a sugar plantation in the western Jamaica parish of Hanover.

In 1835, Phillips unsuccessf­ully attempted to claim compensati­on from the British government for 108 people enslaved on the plantation.

British slave owners received compensati­on of £20 million after the abolition of slavery in 1834.

The Scott Trust yesterday acknowledg­ed and apologised for the origins of the wealth used to fund The Guardian and expressed regret that the media company’s editorial positions, in its early decades, often supported the cotton industry and, therefore, the exploitati­on of enslaved Africans.

The trust also committed to deepening its coverage of the Caribbean, South America, and Africa, as well as of black communitie­s in the UK and the US; funding journalism training for persons from underrepre­sented background­s; and financing further slavery research through the Wilberforc­e Institute at the University of Hull.

The academic research was commission­ed in late 2020 by the Trust and conducted by the University of Nottingham.

The Scott Trust’s restorativ­e justice initiative will be overseen by a fourmember advisory panel of experts to guide and review its programme. Consultati­on will be had with descendant communitie­s in Jamaica, the US, and the UK, as well as other experts and stakeholde­rs.

Ole Jacob Sunde, chair of the Scott Trust, said that the organisati­on was “deeply sorry” about the role of Taylor and his partners.

“We recognise that apologisin­g and sharing these facts transparen­tly is only the first step in addressing The Guardian’s historical links to transatlan­tic slavery, which was a crime against humanity,” Sunde said yesterday.

“In response to the findings, the Scott Trust is committing to fund a restorativ­e justice programme over the next

decade, which will be designed and carried out in consultati­on with descendant communitie­s in the US, Jamaica, the UK and elsewhere, centred on long-term initiative­s and meaningful impact.”

 ?? ?? Ole Jacob Sunde
Ole Jacob Sunde

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