British
Prime Minister David Cameron said his administration would not make reparations
for the country's role in the Caribbean slave trade. Instead he pledged over
half a billion dollars in aid.
Deutsche Welle, 1 October 2015
British
Prime Minister David Cameron made the controversial remarks during his visit to
Jamaica - the first for a British prime minister in 14 years. The BBC reported
that Jamaican Prime Minister Portia Simpson Miller had said she had broached
the issue of reparations with Cameron.
"I do
hope that, as friends who have gone through so much together since those
darkest of times, we can move on from this painful legacy and continue to build
for the future," Cameron told Jamaica's parliament. He added he wanted to
focus on the future, not historical wrongs, and Britain's longstanding position
was "that we do not believe reparations is the right approach."
Cameron
promised a roughly $455 million (407 million euros) aid package to upgrade
bridges, ports and other infrastructure across the Caribbean and reinvigorate
Britain's relationship with the region dotted with its dependencies and former
colonies. He also pledged an additional $180 million (161 million euros) to
improve health facilities and boost economic growth. He said that this support
would make Britain the largest bilateral donor to the region.
The push
for reparations
Caribbean
leaders in 2014 approved a 10-point plan to seek reparations from the former slave-owning
states of Europe. The Caribbean countries said European governments in addition
to being responsible for conducting slavery and genocide, also imposed 100
years of racial apartheid and suffering on freed slaves and the survivors of
genocide.
Slavery
ended throughout the Caribbean in the 1800s in the wake of various slave
revolts, and left many of the region's plantation economies in tatters.
Caribbean leaders have said that the region continues to suffer today from the
effects of slavery.
Governments
in the Caribbean have estimated that reparations for the slave trade could cost
trillions of dollars and some have floated the idea of debt relief.
Some 46,000
British slave-owners, including a distant relative of Cameron's, were among
those compensated a current-day equivalent of 17 billion pounds for "loss
of human property" after the country emancipated its slaves in 1833.
ss/bw (Reuters, AP)
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