The partnership between the 55-member African Union and the Caribbean Community (Caricom) of 20 countries will aim to intensify pressure on former slave-owning nations to engage with the reparations movement.

Delegates also announced the establishment of a global fund based in Africa aiming to accelerate the campaign.

  • MrMakabar@slrpnk.net
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    1 year ago

    The problem here is the mixing of slave trade and exploitation of Africa. The slave trade was mostly buying slave from Africa from Africans and bringing them to the Americas to work on plantations. All countries guilty of the trade should pay reparations for that and that means European countries, the African countries, who enslaved their own and other countries like for example Oman, which were huge in the slave trade.

    As for the exploitation of Africa, that really happened under colonialism, which for the most part happened after the slave trade ended. That is a very different story and we actually have seen some reparations being paid, however it was clearly not enough and many countries refuse. That money should go to Africa.

    However this fund is for the Atlantic slave trade and not colonialism in Africa. There is a difference. In the Atlantic slave trade Africans in Africa are guilty of massive large scale crimes and wanting to see money for collaborating on such ghastly crimes in the past is nothing short of insane to me. The victims are for the most part in America and not in Africa today.