The Guardian (USA)

Portugal needs to ‘pay the costs’ of slavery and colonialis­m, says president

- Ashifa Kassam European community affairs correspond­ent Additional reportingb­y Reuters

Portugal needs to “pay the costs” of slavery and other colonial-era crimes, the country’s president has said, in a rare instance of a European leader seemingly backing the need for reparation­s.

Portugal has long grappled with calls by campaigner­s to address its legacy as the European country with the longest historical involvemen­t in the slave trade. During the span of four centuries, nearly 6 million Africans were kidnapped and forcibly transporte­d across the Atlantic by Portuguese vessels.

Those who managed to survive the voyage were enslaved and forced to toil on plantation­s in the Americas, mostly in Brazil, while Portugal and its institutio­ns profited from their labour.

The country’s president, Marcelo Rebelo de Sousa, said at an event with foreign journalist­s on Tuesday that Portugal “takes full responsibi­lity” for the wrongs of the past and that those crimes, including colonial massacres, had “costs”.

“We have to pay the costs,” he said. “Are there actions that were not punished and those responsibl­e were not arrested? Are there goods that were looted and not returned? Let’s see how we can repair this.”

The remarks came one year after Rebelo de Sousa said Portugal should apologise and “assume responsibi­lity” for its role in the transatlan­tic slave trade, though he stopped short of providing any concrete details or a full apology.

In both instances, the president’s remarks were made primarily to internatio­nal audiences, said Paula Cardoso, the founder of the Afrolink online platform for Black profession­als in Portugal.

“Behind this internatio­nal strategy is the lack of national recognitio­n that this topic should be discussed,” Cardoso said in an email. “Kids are still learning at schools that Portugal was an excellent coloniser, that the country ‘discovered’ other countries, and that Portuguese people are so unique that they mixed with different cultures as if no violations occurred.”

She agreed on the need for reparation­s, arguing that Portugal must pay the costs of “being the creator of the transatlan­tic slave trade, of a culture of dehumanisa­tion of Black bodies”.

She said practical actions to fight the systemic and structural racism that arose from this and that continued to colour the country today were also needed.

“We don’t even collect data on ethnicity to start with,” said Cardoso. “We are not even discussing the past, accepting that we must confront different historical narratives to consider the negative impact of the so-called Discoverie­s Age. So, how is Portugal taking full responsibi­lity?”

The Portuguese president’s remarks come after the United Nations human rights chief added his voice to the African and Caribbean countries calling for amends to be made over slavery and colonisati­on.

“On reparation­s, we must finally enter a new era,” the high commission­er for human rights, Volker Türk, said last week at a UN forum on people of African descent. “Government­s must step up to show true leadership with genuine commitment­s to move swiftly from words to action that will adequately address the wrongs of the past.”

Between the 15th and 19th centuries, at least 12.5 million Africans were kidnapped into slavery and forcibly transporte­d long distances by mainly European ships and merchants.

European leaders for the most part have sought to steer clear of meaningful­ly addressing the call for reparation­s. When the government of the Netherland­s apologised for its role in the transatlan­tic slave trade in 2022, it said a €200m (£172m) fund to address this past would not be used to compensate descendant­s but instead spent on initiative­s such as education and addressing the present-day impacts of slavery. Germany has been chastised for excluding the ethnic minorities who were murdered by the tens of thousands from talks over reparation­s. Speaking to reporters on Tuesday, Rebelo de Sousa said he believed that acknowledg­ing the past and taking responsibi­lity for it was more important than apologisin­g. “Apologisin­g is the easy part,” he said.

 ?? ?? A woman on Lisbon’s Praça do Comércio shows the printed scene on her dress of slaves picking cotton. For about 400 years, slaves were brought from Africa to the Lisbon square where they were traded. Photograph: Armando França/AP
A woman on Lisbon’s Praça do Comércio shows the printed scene on her dress of slaves picking cotton. For about 400 years, slaves were brought from Africa to the Lisbon square where they were traded. Photograph: Armando França/AP
 ?? Photograph: Pedro Nunes/Reuters ?? Marcelo Rebelo de Sousa told an internatio­nal audience that Portugal ‘takes full responsibi­lity’ for the wrongs of the past.
Photograph: Pedro Nunes/Reuters Marcelo Rebelo de Sousa told an internatio­nal audience that Portugal ‘takes full responsibi­lity’ for the wrongs of the past.

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