Virtual media engagement: from Apology to Action

Virtual media engagement:  from Apology to Action

CRC Chairman Sir Hilary Beckles.

 

GEORGETOWN, Guyana--The Caribbean Community CARICOM Reparations Commission (CRC) will convene a virtual media engagement today, Monday, July 6, to update regional and international media on recent developments in the CARICOM region’s push for reparatory justice for the historical crimes of native genocide and African enslavement in the Caribbean region.

  Led by professor Sir Hilary Beckles, Vice-Chancellor, The University of the West Indies (The UWI), who serves as CRC Chairman and moderated by professor Verene Shepherd, Director, Centre for Reparation Research at The UWI, the event will also feature Barbados Prime Minister Mia Amor Mottley and Jamaica Minister of Culture, Gender, Entertainment and Sport, Olivia Grange.

  This media engagement comes in the wake of recent public statements of “apology” and “regret” by some European states and a number of British commercial enterprises for their role in the trans-Atlantic slave trade and in the 200-plus years’ practice of chattel slavery.

  Members of the regional media and the general public are invited to participate in this event entitled Media Engagement: From Apology to Action – CARICOM’s Call for Reparatory Justice, beginning at 10:30am AST and live broadcast via

www.uwitv.org or

www.facebook.com/uwitv.

  “While we reject so-called ‘statements of regret’ as inappropriate and insulting, we accept official ‘statements of apology’ as calls to dialogue in respect of reparatory action. The distinction is known by all, within the context of reparations, and so, once again, we call on the former slave-holding, colonising states of Europe to work with us to address the urgent need for repairing the lasting damages of slavery on our societies. Europe owes our people a debt and now is the time for that debt to be paid,” said Beckles.

  Over the past several weeks, the world has witnessed massive protests against systemic racism and racial violence which began with the Black Lives Matter movement in the USA and has spread to dozens of countries in Europe, Africa, the Middle East, Asia and Latin America. Symbols and monuments of white supremacists have been torn down in several European capitals and protestors have demanded restitution for the crimes of slavery and the ongoing racial oppression of non-white minorities in European countries.

  Since 2013, the CRC has been actively pursuing reparations for native genocide and African enslavement from the former colonising nations of Europe, namely the United Kingdom, France, Spain, Denmark, Germany, the Netherlands, Portugal, Norway, Sweden and Switzerland.

  CARICOM maintains that there is an unpaid and outstanding debt for over 200 years of free labour, that fuelled two industrial revolutions and a quantum leap in development in Europe, while simultaneously under-developing the nations of the Caribbean and relegating the majority of its Indigenous people and those of African descent to persistent, intergenerational poverty.

  CARICOM is again issuing a strong call to Europe to acknowledge its sordid past, to engage with governments in the region and to implement appropriate forms of redress.

The Daily Herald

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