March 25, 2026 — In a historic session at the United Nations General Assembly, a transformative resolution has been adopted, fundamentally altering the global legal and moral discourse surrounding the Transatlantic Slave Trade.
Background: A Century of Silence
The Transatlantic Slave Trade, spanning the 15th to the 19th centuries, was a global enterprise of unprecedented scale and brutality.
The Vote: A Divided World Stage
The resolution, spearheaded by Ghana and supported by the African Union and CARICOM, passed with a significant majority, though not without stark opposition from several Western powers.
In Favor (123): Including the African Group, Caribbean nations, China, and Russia.
Against (3): The United States, Israel, and Argentina.
Abstentions (52): Including the United Kingdom, Canada, Japan, and all 27 members of the European Union.
The U.S. delegation, while condemning the "historic wrongs" of slavery, argued that the resolution was "highly problematic" because it attempted to apply modern international law retroactively to actions that were not illegal at the time they occurred.
2001 vs. 2026: What Has Changed?
This resolution is a major leap forward from the 2001 Durban Declaration and Programme of Action. While the 2001 conference acknowledged that slavery should have always been a crime against humanity, the 2026 resolution goes much further:
Legal Classification: It explicitly labels the trade as the "gravest crime against humanity" and a violation of jus cogens (peremptory norms of international law that are binding on all states).
Reparatory Justice: Unlike the 2001 text, which focused largely on "regret" and general anti-discrimination, the 2026 resolution calls for "concrete steps towards remedying historical wrongs," including formal apologies, financial compensation, and the restitution of cultural artifacts.
The Path to Reparations: Americans, Caribbeans, and Africans
For the global African diaspora, this vote provides a powerful new framework for negotiations. While General Assembly resolutions are not legally binding, they serve as a "safeguard against forgetting" and a reflection of world opinion.
For Americans: This bolsters the case for domestic reparations by framing the struggle as part of a global human rights mandate rather than just a national policy debate.
For the Caribbean: It validates the CARICOM Ten-Point Plan for Reparatory Justice, providing international leverage to demand debt cancellation and developmental aid from former colonial powers.
For Africans: It accelerates the "Decade of Action on Reparations" (2026–2035), focusing on the return of looted treasures and the restructuring of global financial architectures that remain rooted in the colonial era.
As Ghanaian President John Dramani Mahama stated, "The truth cannot be buried...
Sources:
The Guardian: UN Votes to Describe Slave Trade as Gravest Crime PBS NewsHour: UN Calls for Reparations for Trafficking Enslaved Africans
This video provides a deep dive into the specific goals of the resolution and the reasons behind the resistance from Western nations.
ONU declarou o tráfico de africanos escravizados como o crime MAIS GRAVE contra a humanidade.
— UpdateCharts (@updatecharts) March 25, 2026
A resolução, proposta por Gana, foi aprovada com votos CONTRÁRIOS de Estados Unidos, Israel e Argentina, enquanto Reino Unido, Espanha e Portugal se ABSTIVERAM. pic.twitter.com/frXMLRVjfe
One of the controversies caused for modern Ghana trying to push the United Nations to recognize the harm to Africa and the African Diaspora done by the Transatlantic Slave trade is that Ghana sold Africans through the trade.
It is the world that should be demanding reparations from Ghana for slavery, not the other way around.
— Johannes M. Koenraadt (@johannesmkx) March 25, 2026
Ghana used to be the Kingdom of Dahomey which captured most black slaves. Slaves that couldn't be sold to the Arabs were killed or eaten. These people have balls but not as… https://t.co/8RpGSN5YCl pic.twitter.com/AUkXlwAzUs
Of course morons confuse the current nation of Ghana with the Dahomey Empire.
The United States, Israel, and Argentina opposed the resolution.
In case you're wondering why there's barely any Black population in Argentina, it's because they literally committed mass genocide against their Black population in an effort to 'whiten' the country. So their stance at the UN isn't actually surprising. pic.twitter.com/FfxDsu8tlQ
— Black (@LilithBlack25) March 25, 2026
Here is more on why Argentina likely did not not support the resolution.
Never forget, Argentina 🇦🇷 deliberately removed Black people from its historical narrative. pic.twitter.com/oaWh3AqTVt
— Wofaase👿 (@wofaase_) March 25, 2026
Ghana President Mahama, Rev. Al Sharpton & NYC Mayor Mamdani lays wreaths at the African burial grounds in New York…
— Creole Louisiana 🇺🇸 (@bAnthonYsr) March 25, 2026
Which was discovered in 1991 & proclaimed a National Monument in 2006
Where the ancestors of Foundational Black Americans… both Free & Enslaved unidentified… pic.twitter.com/ErNB4mTsHD
Africa trying to get reparations for the descendants of slaves is like the kidnapper joining the search party for the person they kidnapped.😂😂😂
— Nia Educational (@NiaEducational) March 25, 2026
Africa owes reparations too. Foundational Black Americans clocked this money grab that Ghana was attempting. 😂😂😂 pic.twitter.com/U7kyK6HMU6
Even the white supremacist in the United States government knew that Ghana was trying to steal reparations from Black Americans. https://t.co/dmPzr6kBav pic.twitter.com/dXunheaTgo
— In The Loop Radio (@_ZEROSYSTEM) March 25, 2026
The UN already declared the transatlantic slave trade a crime against humanity in 2001. #reparations#ghana#Ncobra pic.twitter.com/RK7911XGcx
— The Good King🤴🏾 (@GodKingJustice) March 25, 2026
🚨We Reject the Apology🚨
— American Freedmen Legal Fund (@realAFLF) March 25, 2026
Ghana issued an apology—but it doesn’t address U.S. Verified Freedmen.
We are not a general diaspora category. We are a defined population with standing, history, and representation.
Without recognition. Without engagement. Without correction.
It’s… pic.twitter.com/jz60GcA6bU
No comments:
Post a Comment