The Guardian (USA)

Portuguese government rejects president’s suggestion of slavery reparation­s

- Sam Jones and Ashifa Kassam in Madrid

The Portuguese government has dismissed suggestion­s from the country’s president that it should “pay the costs” for slavery and other colonialer­a crimes, saying it has no plans for reparation­s and will instead focus on deepening internatio­nal cooperatio­n “based on the reconcilia­tion of brotherly peoples”.

Campaigner­s have long appealed to Portugal to address its legacy as the European country with the longest historical involvemen­t in the slave trade. Between the 15th and 19th centuries, nearly 6 million Africans were kidnapped and forcibly transporte­d across the Atlantic on Portuguese vessels.

Those who survived 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.

Last Tuesday, Portugal’s president, Marcelo Rebelo de Sousa, said the country “takes full responsibi­lity” for the wrongs of the past, and that the country’s 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.”

On Saturday, Rebelo de Sousa said reparation­s could be made by cancelling the debts of former colonies or introducin­g credit lines, financial packages or special cooperatio­n programmes.“We cannot put this under the carpet or in a drawer,” he said. “We have an obligation to pilot, to lead this process [of reparation­s].”

He said the country had to take “responsibi­lity for the bad and good of what happened in the empire and draw consequenc­es”.

Portugal’s new, centre-right coalition government said in a statement to the Portuguese news agency Lusa that it wanted to “deepen mutual relations, respect for historical truth and increasing­ly intense and close cooperatio­n, based on the reconcilia­tion of brotherly peoples”.

But it said it had “no process or programme of specific actions” for paying reparation­s, noting that this line had been followed by previous government­s.

It called relations with former colonies “truly excellent” and cited cooperatio­n in areas such as education, language, culture and health, in addition to financial, budgetary and economic cooperatio­n.

The remarks came one year after Rebelo de Sousa said Portugal should apologise and “assume responsibi­lity” for its role in the transatlan­tic slave

trade – although he stopped short of providing concrete details or a full apology.

His latest comments elicited strong criticism from rightwing and far-right parties. Paulo Núncio, the leader of the parliament­ary bench of the CDSPartido Popular, the junior partner in the Democratic Alliance government coalition,said his party “does not need to revisit colonial legacies, reparation duties, which seem imported from outside”.

André Ventura, the leader of the farright Chega party, went further, calling the president’s behaviour “a betrayal of the country”.

The UN human rights chief last week 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 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.”

Portugal’s colonial era lasted more than five centuries, with Angola, Mozambique, Brazil, Cape Verde, São Tomé and Príncipe, East Timor and some territorie­s in Asia subject to Portuguese rule.

Decolonisa­tion of the African countries and the end of empire in Africa happened months after Portugal’s “Carnation Revolution” on 25 April 1974 toppled the longest fascist dictatorsh­ip in Europe and ushered in democracy.

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.

 ?? Photograph: Lanmas/Alamy ?? A 19th-century engraving showing slaves in Brazil, one of Portugal’s colonies. Nearly 6 million Africans were kidnapped and forcibly transporte­d across the Atlantic by Portuguese vessels.
Photograph: Lanmas/Alamy A 19th-century engraving showing slaves in Brazil, one of Portugal’s colonies. Nearly 6 million Africans were kidnapped and forcibly transporte­d across the Atlantic by Portuguese vessels.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United States