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 Africa:Socialists Call for Reparations
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Momodou



Denmark
11712 Posts

Posted - 26 Oct 2008 :  11:51:33  Show Profile Send Momodou a Private Message
Culled from:

Inter Press Service (Johannesburg)


Socialists Call for Reparations

By Lansana Fofana
Freetown

24 October 2008

The first West African conference of the African Socialist International has ended in Freetown, with delegates calling for reparations to be paid to Africans for 400 years of slavery.

A presentation by Ismail Rashid, a Sierra Leonean professor of African History at New York's Vassar College, captured the mood when he insisted that it is long overdue for the West to pay for the "heinous crimes committed against Africans for our enslavement and dehumanisation."


"Asking for reparations is no favour demanded from the west," the radical pan-Africanist exploded. "It is our right because through slavery, the West stole our labour, dignity and resources. It is repayment for our labour, our looted human resources."

The meeting brought together African socialists from around the continent, Europe and the United States to discuss this and other themes, against the background of the current financial crisis facing western economies.

"Reparations may come in the form of technology transfer and financial resources because slavery destroyed Africa's early potential for growth and industrial advancement," Rashid added.

The issue of reparations has long been a subject of debate in intellectual circles around the continent and participants at the Freetown meeting agreed that the effects of slavery still hamper Africa's growth.

Luwezi Kinshasha, a Congolese delegate at the conference, argued that "neo-colonialism is a by-product of slavery."

"Western Europe enslaved Africans for 400 years, shipping out our people as human commodities to work on plantations in the west and help develop Europe. The trend continues even after independence, with the West propping up surrogate regimes which seek to promote their interests," Kinshasha says.

He adds that only socialism will unite the mass of African people to take control of their destinies and move forward. According to him, African workers and masses should take power because this is the only way the continent's resources will be properly utilised for the benefit of the African people.

As general secretary of the African Socialist International, an outgrowth of the African Peoples Socialist Party founded in the United States in the 1970s during the struggle for Black Power, Kinshasha told IPS the conference aimed at uniting and mobilising Africans to step up the campaign for reparations.

"This conference is a starting point. We must organize and unite the African people so that our call for reparations will be heeded by the West," the Congolese activist laments.

"There's been more talking in the past. We need to move a step forward and really engage the West in our quest for reparations," he says, adding: "Even before that, we must demand that the West first openly accept guilt for slavery by apologizing to Africans and then move on to settle for reparations."

A local pressure group, the Pan African Union (PANAFU) which also took part in the conference, says it has been exploring the subject of reparations and has a working committee charged with the responsibility of coordinating with similar organisations on the continent to push forward the fight for reparations.

Abdul Rashid, an activist belonging to the group, said PANAFU has been campaigning for reparations for more than a decade and that the Freetown conference adds impetus to the cause.

"The conference is timely. We need to organise such meetings across the continent, on periodic basis, so as to create awareness among the African people that reparations have to be paid by the west, a right of the African people and a moral obligation of the west," Rashid told IPS. A practical way to push forward the campaign for reparation, he says, would be the setting up of an all African committee that would engage the West aggressively, through dialogue, to extract reparations.

Cherinoh Alpha Bah, the regional organizer of the African Socialist International, says a number of European companies and industries benefited from the slave trade and that these must be forced to pay back to Africa.

"Some companies and industries which helped Europe's development no doubt benefited tremendously from the slave trade and some of their profits must go to Africa as reparations. Also, looted artifacts from Africa must be returned because these rightly belong to the African people," Bah maintains.

Ismail Rashid, whose presentation was mainly on the trans- Atlantic slave trade and reparations, gave a historical background of slavery, highlighting the apparent collaboration of Africans as a reason why the trade flourished in the first place.

"It was the collaboration of Africans that helped fuel the trade and this collusion is still happening today as we see neo-colonial regimes on the continent directly serving the interests of their western masters," Rashid opines, adding that this is today manifested in the continent's debt burden and unjust trade policies.

He laments the fact that little is taught about African history in schools and higher institutions of learning on the continent and urged Africans to remember the horrors of enslavement, the dispersal of African people as commodities and their systematic exploitation and dehumanization.

This dehumanization, Rashid insists, still continues in the form of the prevalence of racism and the loss of self identity and confidence. He concludes that it was the resistance of the African people that helped end slavery and colonialism and urges that such resistance must continue if neo-colonialism, an offshoot of both despicable systems, is to be defeated.

Sierra Leone was a fitting venue for the conference because it was a major slave trading outpost, according to the conference organisers. The government here, through its ministry of tourism and culture, has pledged to preserve the historic Bunce Island slave fortress, off the coast of Freetown, from where thousands of Africans were taken into slavery, as well as other relics of the trade. It has also set up a Relics and Monuments Commission, charged with the responsibility of identifying other slave outposts that had long been neglected and made unattractive to tourists.

A statue of Sengbe Pieh, slave name was Joseph Cinque, the leader of the Amistad slave revolt off the coast of the United States, has been placed at a prominent round-about in west Freetown and is daily visited by ordinary passers-by as well as tourists.

Last year, the country celebrated the bi-centenary of the abolition of slavery and the founding of Freetown as home for freed or liberated slaves. Activists say they would put pressure on the government to add voice to the call for reparations, but this is yet to happen.

A clear conscience fears no accusation - proverb from Sierra Leone

mansasulu



997 Posts

Posted - 26 Oct 2008 :  14:10:20  Show Profile Send mansasulu a Private Message
Too often, I believe we seem to leave out the responsibilities of our african ancestors in slavery. Slavery didn't start as a forcible endeavour. Our ancestors were willing partners and active participants to this heinous crime that will forever leave an indebile mark on human history.

We sold our brothers and sisters we deemed worthless for stuff like gunpowder. True, the white man got the long end of the stick and came out on top of this "trade." Asking for reparations today is equal to selling a product to someone and after the deal is done and dusted, you ask for more money when you realize the magnitude of the loss you made in that trade. In all my time spent in the west, I have never come across one westerner who challenged me as to why we do not stand up and owe our part to why slavery happened. Rarely do I have the conversation of slavery, partly because I am ashamed. I think we should be bold enough to look straight in the eyes of our brothers and sisters who are decendents of former slaves and tell them our forefathers sold their forefathers to start with.

"...Verily, in the remembrance of Allâh do hearts find rest..." Sura Al-Rad (Chapter 13, Verse 28)

...Gambian by birth, Muslim by the grace of Allah...
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BrufutJo



16 Posts

Posted - 26 Oct 2008 :  19:20:04  Show Profile Send BrufutJo a Private Message
Good reply. Mansasulu. But I think Africa often is not interested in the price that poor Westerners have also paid to enriching the Capitalist society. I tried to get a Gambian friend interested in the tragedy of Aberfan when he was with us recently, but he felt it had nothing to do with him. Do the Welsh seek reparation for their ancestors killed in the mines, the children who suffered and died cleaning chimneys and who were mangled in machinery in the mills and the mines, or the Irish who starved to death during the potato famine, or the criminals deported for petty crimes, or children deported until recently for the crime of being an orphan. It is enough to know that these were crimes against humanity too, and should not be repeated.
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Momodou



Denmark
11712 Posts

Posted - 27 Oct 2008 :  18:46:23  Show Profile Send Momodou a Private Message
Mansalulu, I agree with you that Africans are as well responsible for the slave trade which lasted for hundreds of years and even to this date it is happening in some countries (http://news.bbc.co.uk/2/hi/africa/7692396.stm ). You also have to remember that many Africans are also victims and never took part in the trade.
There are however, many multinational companies of today that got their wealth from the Trans Atlantic slave trade. It is in their records and I believe all should accept the guilt and apologize for it.

BrufutJo, when people talk about reparations, I believe they don’t mean ordinary westerners but those who profited from the slave trade, so you should not feel any guilt. By the way no one is stopping the Irish or the deportees to Australia claiming compensation for whatever they have been subjected to. Just because they don’t should not prevent others from demanding reparation either.

A clear conscience fears no accusation - proverb from Sierra Leone
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mansasulu



997 Posts

Posted - 27 Oct 2008 :  19:29:08  Show Profile Send mansasulu a Private Message
Good points Momodou...

"...Verily, in the remembrance of Allâh do hearts find rest..." Sura Al-Rad (Chapter 13, Verse 28)

...Gambian by birth, Muslim by the grace of Allah...
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