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Dear Fellow South African,
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Every May, we observe Africa Month to commemorate the
founding of the Organisation of African Unity in 1963.
Celebrating and affirming our identity as Africans is as
integral to our national character as the ideals that
anchor our democracy.
We are one people. Despite Africa¡¦s many languages and
cultures, we take pride in a common identity, in our
shared values and in a belonging that transcends
geographical boundaries.
Even as we celebrate our continent¡¦s vibrancy and
dynamism, we are mindful of the legacy of Africa¡¦s
colonial past and how it continues to shape our
continent¡¦s fortunes. While most African countries
achieved independence many decades ago, the effects of
the colonial era are still evident in much of the
inequality, economic exclusion, political instability
and conflicts that persist in parts of Africa.
The most extreme form of dehumanisation was the
transcontinental slave trade perpetrated by European
empires and slave-trading networks across the Sahara and
North Africa. For more than a hundred years, millions of
African men, women and children were hunted down,
captured and traded as if they were not people, but
possessions.
The reality is that much of the wealth of former
colonial powers today is the result of the deprivation
of Africa¡¦s people. Not only were millions of Africans
enslaved, but colonial powers grew wealthy from the vast
tracts of African land they forcibly occupied and the
valuable resources they extracted.
Across Africa, our people were taken, both dead and
alive, as human specimens to be displayed and studied in
faraway capitals. African historical artefacts were
looted and taken to European museums.
The colonial powers have largely avoided a deeper
reckoning with the consequences of these acts. Some have
apologised for specific atrocities, but in the main they
have fallen short of full unqualified apologies for
colonialism.
Reparations for Africa, which was the site of some of
the worst forms of brutality in human history, has been
a contested issue for decades.
Opponents of reparations argue that modern states differ
from those of the colonial period. It has been argued
that too much time has passed, that those directly
harmed are no longer alive and that it would be unjust
to hold to account individuals or governments for
actions committed decades or centuries ago.
This would be to wilfully ignore the intergenerational
trauma wrought by slavery that continues to hold back
the development of entire societies in Africa. As the
Guyanese political activist and academic Walter Rodney
writes in his seminal 1972 work ¡¥How Europe
underdeveloped Africa¡¦, ¡§when one tries to measure the
effect of European slave trading on the African
continent, it is essential to realise that one is
measuring the effect of social violence rather than
trade in any normal sense of the word.¡¨
This issue has now been given renewed momentum. In March
this year, the United Nations General Assembly adopted a
resolution declaring the trafficking of enslaved
Africans and the racialised enslavement of Africans as
the gravest crime against humanity.
The resolution is anchored in acknowledgement of harm,
reparatory justice and restitution. It calls for looted
cultural property to be returned and for compensation
and other forms of reparation to be considered.
The former colonial powers derived financial benefit
from the display of our looted historical and cultural
artefacts in their museums and institutions. Enslaved
labour from Africa built farms, industries and
infrastructure to enrich colonial powers, as the
countries from which the slaves were taken remain
underdeveloped even today.
The colonial enterprise was not merely about the
deprivation of human rights. It was motivated by profit.
As Walter Rodney writes, ¡§it was economics that
determined that Europe should invest in Africa and
control the continent¡¦s raw materials and labour¡¨.
Whatever form reparations ultimately take, they should
be aligned with our continent¡¦s developmental objectives
and assist African countries to tackle debt challenges,
poverty alleviation, inequality and unemployment.
Just as the exploitation of Africa and the enslavement
of millions of her people made the former colonial
powers wealthy, redress must take the form of sustained,
direct, material investment in Africa¡¦s development.
This should include increased foreign direct investment
and market access for the African countries affected by
slavery. It should include skills and technology
transfer. And it should include the return of historical
artefacts to their countries of origin.
South Africa supports a unified, collaborative approach
to the issue of reparations for Africa. This must
include concrete measures to redress the lingering
effects of the slave trade and colonialism that are
forward looking.
Just as truth and reconciliation has been an integral
part of our own journey towards nationhood, so too must
the former colonial powers confront the historical
injustice of colonialism with honesty and integrity.
Beyond that, they must make a clear commitment to
tangible measures of redress that support Africa¡¦s
growth and development.
With best regards,
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