African and Caribbean countries have called for a formal apology and reparations from nations that benefited from the transatlantic slave trade. This was reported by Qazaqyia.kz citing BBC News.
The demands come at the end of a three-day conference in Ghana which aimed to advance the push for reparatory justice.
It follows a landmark UN resolution in March that recognised transatlantic slavery as the "gravest crime against humanity", urging UN member states to contribute to a reparations fund.
Around 12-15 million African men, women and children were captured and trafficked to the Americas to work as slaves from the 15th to the 19th century.
A 19-point reparations plan has been endorsed as part of the "Next Steps" conference in the Ghanaian capital of Accra. It calls for comprehensive debt relief, the restitution of looted cultural property, and the establishment of a global reparations fund, though no specific amount was stated. It also addresses the disproportionate impact of slavery on African women and girls.
The conference leaders also called on countries formerly involved in the slave trade to offer their "full, formal and unconditional apologies".
Ghana's President John Dramani Mahama told delegates: "History does not ask us to inherit guilt, but it asks us to inherit responsibility."
French President Emmanuel Macron gave a virtual note at the conference, where he recognised that enslaved people were "dehumanised and treated as goods". However, he cautioned against reducing reparations for slavery to financial compensation alone, saying they should not be seen as a "cheque written to bring the story to a close".
The UN General Assembly vote took place in March, with 123 votes in favour, and three votes - the United States, Israel and Argentina - against declaring the transatlantic slave trade a crime against humanity. 52 countries, including the United Kingdom and European Union member states, abstained.
Unlike UN Security Council resolutions, those from the General Assembly are not legally binding.
The UK has long rejected calls to pay reparations, saying today's institutions cannot be held responsible for past wrongs. "No single set of atrocities should be regarded as more or less significant than another," UK ambassador to the UN James Kariuki had then said.
The US ambassador to the UN echoed this, saying his country did not "recognise a legal right to reparations for historical wrongs that were not illegal under international law at the time they occurred". He added that the UN resolution was unclear as to "whom the recipients of 'reparatory justice' would be".
No country has ever paid reparations to the descendants of enslaved Africans or affected African, Caribbean and Latin American nations. Most of the reparations paid by governments came in the form of compensation to slave owners in the 19th century, rather than to those who had been enslaved. That includes the UK - in the 1830s, following the abolition of slavery, the country paid owners the equivalent of more than $21bn (£16bn) in today's money.
