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Diaspora and Development,
200 Anniversary of Abolition Act
By
Dr. Daniel T. Osabu-Kle
Your Excellency, moderator, invited guests, members
of the Kilimanjaro Students Association, students,
ladies and gentlemen. I am for peace, but when I
speak, they are for war. Those who are for war know
themselves and why. My book, Compatible Cultural
Democracy: The Key to Development in Africa which
argued and explained that democracy is nothing new
to Africa being part of its indigenous culture was
the source of much discussion. An article I wrote in
the Jounal of Black Studies, “The African Reparation
Cry”, which estimated the amount of reparation to be
at least US100 trillion dollars and called for its
payment to provide Africa and its Diaspora with the
resources necessary for development was not
comfortable to those nations with guilty mind. Why
do I as a member of the Diaspora care so much? It is
because the Atlantic Ocean does not have the power
to convert an African into an Amerindian or a
European. This must be the guiding principle of the
Diaspora! We are all Africans even if we deny so!
Historically the contribution of the Diaspora to
development in the political ideological, economic
and cultural spheres have been spectacular. Included
among the many are Edward Blyden, Booker T.
Washington, Marcus Garvey, Dr. W.E.B DuBois, George
Padmore, Walter Rodney, Frantz Fanon, Malcolm X, and
Martin Luther King Jr. The contributions of these
personalities are available on the internet and
those interested may easily access them. Surely they
had their personal differences and different methods
of approach, but their common spirit of Pan-Africanism
resulted in the independence, though not
decolonization, of countries in Africa and the
Caribbean. The present generation of Diaspora owes
them the duty of continuing the struggle to
decolonize Africa and the Caribbean through the
breaking down of the inherited colonial structures
that perpetuate neo-colonialism and replacing them
with structures oriented to the developmental
aspirations of our people. More recently Oprah
Winfrey has made a difference and set a good example
by establishing a school for girls in South Africa.
That was a step in the right direct worth emulation.
Today when the 200 anniversary of the nominal
abolition of slavery is being celebrated, I seize
the opportunity to emphasize that the abolition of
slavery is a total myth, that the Diaspora can do
more to contribute to development by seeking to
complete the good works that those before us began
concerning the struggle for reparations estimated to
be over US$100 trillion, draw attention to positive
contributions the Diaspora can still make to
development, and also explain the effects of the
brain drain.
Out of nothing, God created the universe.
Unfortunately we, being human cannot do that. We
need resources for our accomplishments. In the
invasions of Africa during the slave trade and
colonialism, gold, silver, diamonds, other precious
materials and human resources were, plundered,
looted and stolen to make others rich and Africa and
its Diaspora poor. Africa and its Diaspora still
need those resources for development.
The Slave Trade and Slavery Have not Been
Abolished Yet
Contrary to popular
belief, and the celebration of 200 years of
abolition, the slave trade and slavery were only
abolished on paper but, in reality, have not been
abolished. Many may be shocked to hear this from me,
but I can explain why the abolition is a myth at
best. The slave trade and slavery both created
income generating wealth with a multiplying effect
for the nations and institutions that legalized and
participated in it. The works of Fage, Ivor Wilks,
Paul Lovejoy, and Eric Wolf all identify certain
countries in Western Europe, the United States and
Muslim Arabs as those who enslaved Africans through
the captive form of slavery.
The identified nations of Western Europe include the
Portuguese, the Dutch, the Danes, the Swedes, the
French and the British. Since the so called
abolition of the slave trade and slavery, the slave
masters who benefited from that crime against
humanity have rather been given reparations for
losing their slaves, but Africa and its Diaspora who
suffered and continue to suffer from the
consequences have received nothing. In a twist of
justice, the same nations of Europe and America that
emphasize the rule of law all over the globe today
granted reparations to the slave masters for losing
their slaves, but nothing to the manumitted slaves.
The British Parliament proudly insulted justice by
approving reparation of 20 million pounds to slave
owners already rich through the labour of the
manumitted slaves.
Other European powers that legalized slavery
emulated the British example. France, Denmark, and
the Netherlands paid reparation to the slave
masters, but nothing to the manumitted slaves, and
United States government refused to honour its
meagre promise of “40 acres of land and a mule” to
the manumitted slaves. Africa, the manumitted slaves
and their descendants who suffered and continue to
suffer have received practically nothing. So far,
the calls by people of African descent for
reparations have fallen upon deaf ears. Celebrating
200 years of abolition of slavery therefore means
celebrating 200 years of denying Africa and its
Diaspora both apology and reparations. I emphasize
that an apology is not reparation though it may
precede it. Africans do not eat apologies!
Generations of those who benefited continue to
benefit while generations of Africa and its Diaspora
continue to suffer from the consequences of that
crime against humanity. The time is ripe for the
Diaspora to ask the question, “abolition for whose
advantage?” and rise up to fight for its right by
demanding reparations under the framework of
international law and the evidence of case law that
buttresses it.
One of the most effective ways of commencing the
investigation of a crime is seeking to answer the
question “who benefits from the crime?” By
continuing to benefit from the crime against
humanity, the present generations of those countries
that legalized the crime indirectly continue to
participate in the slave trade and slavery while
Africa and its Diaspora continue to be the captives
and the slaves. The ancient fetters were visible;
the modern fetters are invisible. The ancient
methods were observable; the modern methods are
subtle. Here lies the difference, but the results
are the same: one enjoys wealth and honour; the
other suffers poverty and humiliation.
Reparation is the only means of atoning for the
wrongs of the past and breaking this virtuous cycle
so that the perpetrators free themselves from guilt,
but that is precisely what the perpetrators continue
to refuse to do. Until an adequate amount of
reparation is paid to enable Africa and its Diaspora
to build income generating wealth and catch up with
those who continue to benefit, the invisible fetters
will continue to exist and the slave trade and
slavery cannot be said to have been really
abolished. Those who continue to benefit are as
guilty as those who were directly involved centuries
ago. It is not fair for them to inherit the
benefits, but refuse to inherit the crime. If they
accept the benefits, they must also accept the
crime.......
Continued/2
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