African and Caribbean Leaders Urge Apology and Reparations After Landmark UN Resolution
In Accra, Ghana, a gathering of more than 80 nations’ representatives concluded the “Next Steps” conference with a unified call for former slave‑trading states to issue full, formal, and unconditional apologies for the transatlantic slave trade. The statement, released on Friday, frames the apology as a prerequisite for meaningful reconciliation, trust‑building, and reparative justice.
The Ghana Conference and Its Demands
The conference, organized by the African Union and the Caribbean Community (CARICOM), built on momentum from a 2023 reparations summit held in the same city. Delegates emphasized that recognition alone is insufficient; concrete actions—such as compensation under international law—must follow.
Ghana’s President John Dramani Mahama highlighted the enduring legacy of slavery:
“Our voices have been fragmented for decades and it has served the interests of some groups to keep those voices fragmented.”
He added that the UN resolution adopted in March creates a new platform for sustained dialogue on reparations affecting Africa, the Caribbean, and the wider African diaspora.
Background: The UN Resolution
In March 2022, the United Nations General Assembly passed Resolution 76/262, which characterizes the transatlantic slave trade as “the gravest crime against humanity.” Although the resolution is non‑binding, it carries significant moral authority and has been cited by scholars and policymakers as a catalyst for renewed reparations advocacy.
Historians estimate that roughly 12 million Africans were forcibly abducted between the 16th and 19th centuries, transported across the Atlantic, and enslaved on plantations that generated immense wealth for European powers while inflicting profound suffering.
Public Opinion and Political Hurdles
United States Perspective
Attitudes toward reparations vary widely among nations that would be expected to contribute. A 2021 survey by the Pew Research Center found that only about 30 % of U.S. adults believed descendants of enslaved people should receive compensation in the form of land, money, or other measures.
This skepticism reflects broader debates about responsibility, fiscal feasibility, and the appropriate scope of remedial measures.
Divergent Views Across Nations
While some governments have expressed willingness to explore symbolic gestures or development assistance, others remain resistant to any form of financial liability. Activists argue that a comprehensive reparations package should include:
- Direct financial payments to descendants of enslaved Africans
- Targeted development aid to affected African and Caribbean nations
- Return or restitution of colonized resources and cultural artifacts
- Institutional reforms addressing systemic racism and inequality
Proposed Mechanisms for Reparations
Global Reparations Fund
At the 2023 summit in Accra, participants floated the idea of a global reparations fund administered through an international trusteeship. Details on governance, funding sources, and distribution criteria remain under discussion, but proponents see the fund as a vehicle for pooling contributions from former slave‑trading states and channeling them toward education, healthcare, and infrastructure projects in impacted regions.
Alternative Approaches
Other proposals include bilateral agreements where specific nations commit to targeted investments—such as scholarship programs for African diaspora students or technology transfers to Caribbean agricultural sectors. Legal scholars also advocate for the use of international courts to adjudicate claims, citing precedents in post‑conflict reparations.
Conclusion
The Accra conference marks a shift from symbolic acknowledgment toward actionable demands for apology and reparations. By grounding their appeal in the UN’s moral declaration, historical data on the scale of the slave trade, and contemporary public opinion research, African and Caribbean leaders aim to forge a path that balances historical accountability with practical socioeconomic redress. Whether the international community will translate these calls into concrete policies remains to be seen, but the dialogue has undeniably entered a new phase.


