Caricom. 15 états de la caraïbes officialisent leur demande de réparation au titre de l’esclavage et de la colonisation

Igor Rembotte
Par Igor Rembotte 12 Mar 2014 14:54

Caricom. 15 états de la caraïbes officialisent leur demande de réparation au titre de l’esclavage et de la colonisation

A l’issue d’un sommet de deux jours à Saint-Vincent et Grenadines le 10 et 11 mars 2014, les quinze pays membres de la CARICOM ont acté dans un plan en dix points le fait de demander réparations aux nations européennes ayant pratiqué l’esclavage, la traite négrière et la colonisation.

Ces 15 états sont Antigua and BarbudaThe BahamasBarbadosBelizeDominicaGrenadaGuyanaHaitiJamaicaMontserratSaint LuciaSt. Kitts and NevisSt. Vincent and the GrenadinesSuriname et Trinidad and Tobago.

Cette annonce a été assumée par l’avocat Martyn Day dans un communiqué du 11 mars 2014 et qui vous est livré en pied d’article. Martyn Day appartient au cabinet britannique Leigh Day et qui portera le trajet juridique de cette demande de réparations voulue par les 15 états membres de la CARICOM. Le Portugal et l’Espagne ne sont pas concernés par ce plan en 10 points, leurs ex-colonies ne faisant pas partie de la CARICOM, pas plus que les Etats Unis d’ailleurs.

Les états européens visés sont la France, le Royaume-Unis et les Pays-Bas auxquels il est demandé outre des excuses publiques et sincères, une annulation de la dette extérieure des états membres de la CARICOM et la mise en place d’un programme de rapatriement à destinations des descendants des 10 millions d’africains déportés qui permettraient à ceux qui le souhaitent de se réétablir dans des conditions dignes dans leurs pays d’origine.

Les 10 points du plan retenus par les 15 états de la CARICOM et que devraient assumer les 3 pays européens concernés sont :

• Excuses complètes et officielles

• Permettre aux descendants de la traite négrière de réintégrer leurs nations d’origine s’ils le souhaitent dans des conditions de parfaite légalité ;

• Mettre en place un programme de développement dédié aux populations natives des caraïbes et qui ont subit un génocide ;

• Mettre en place des institutions culturelles sur les territoires concernés qui permettront aux descendants de l’esclavage d’y être reconnus et aux pays européen d’assumer cette part de l’histoire ;

• Mettre en place les outils nécessaires, scientifique, technologique et économique au traitement de l’hypertension artérielle et du diabète conséquences du stress séculaire vécut par certaines populations ;

• Mettre en place des dispositifs forts pour éradiquer l’illettrisme ;

• Développer un programme qui permette de constituer des ponts entre les descendants d’esclaves et leurs nations d’origine ;

• Obtenir une décision de justice reconnaissant les 4 siècles de servitude pour permettre le processus de réparation, y compris psychologique ;

• Assumer le transfert de technologie à destination des anciennes colonies qui ont été spoliées durant la période esclavagiste et depuis ;

• Assumer la dette extérieure, héritage du colonialisme, que les 15 états concernés ont été contraints de contracter.

Sir Hilary Beckles, président de la commission des réparations de la CARICOM a ainsi annoncé : “La réparation pour l’esclavage et le siècle d’apartheid racial qui a suivi jusque dans les années 1950 s’avère comme une requête légitime aujourd’hui au sein des communautés caribéennes en raison des dommages persistants et des souffrances liées aux crimes contre l’humanité commis sous le colonialisme.”

Si l’on prend la pleine mesure de cette décision de la CARICOM, il sera intéressant de voir avec quelle bonne volonté les trois états européens accueilleront la demande. L’avocat Martyn Day se fait fort d’obtenir pour la CARICOM la mise en place d’une conférence internationale sur le sujet en présence de la France, des Pays Bas et du Royaume Unis.

Sur un autre plan, et si l’on comprend pleinement que la compétence de la CARICOM soit géographiquement circonscrite aux territoires de ses états membres, on devine en trompe l’œil que d’autres territoires de la Caraïbes qui n’ont pas la chance de voir leur propre drapeau flotter aux sommets des fortins pourraient néanmoins vouloir se donner les moyens de profiter de cette porte ouverte courageusement par la CARICOM.


11 March 2014 – d’après http://www.leighday.co.uk

A meeting of CARICOM nations in St Vincent has approved unanimously a ten-point plan proposed by the Caricom Reparations Commission to achieve reparatory justice for the victims of genocide, slavery, slave trading, and racial apartheid.

Sir Hilary Beckles, the Chairman of the Caricom Reparations Commission, said:

“I am very pleased that the conference has adopted the Plan. Reparations for the slave era is an issue that has resonated increasingly in recent years.

“Reparations for slavery, and the century of racial apartheid that replaced it into the 1950s, resonate as a popular right today in Caribbean communities because of the persistent harm and suffering linked to the crimes against humanity under colonialism.”

Martyn Day, from law firm Leigh Day and who is advising the commission said:

“This is a very comprehensive and fair set of demands on the Governments whose countries grew rich at the expense of those regions whose human wealth was stolen from them.

“A Conference in London between representatives of CARICOM and the slave nations, to include the Governments of Holland, UK, France as well as potentially other nations who profited from the slave trade, will enable our clients to quickly gauge whether or not their concerns are being taken seriously.”

Ten Point Action Plan

Introduction

In 2013 Caribbean Heads of Governments established the Caricom Reparations Commission [CRC] with a mandate to prepare the case for reparatory justice for the region’s indigenous and African descendant communities who are the victims of Crimes against Humanity [CAH] in the forms of genocide, slavery, slave trading, and racial apartheid.

This document, prepared by the CRC, proposes the delivery of this mandate within the formulation of the Caricom Reparations Justice Program [CRJP]. The CRC asserts that victims and descendants of these CAH have a legal right to reparatory justice, and that those who committed these crimes, and who have been enriched by the proceeds of these crimes, have a reparatory case to answer.

The CRJP recognizes the special role and status of European governments in this regard, being the legal bodies that instituted the framework for developing and sustaining these crimes. These governments, furthermore, served as the primary agencies through which slave based enrichment took place, and as national custodians of criminally accumulated wealth.

THE CRC ASSERTS THAT EUROPEAN GOVERNMENTS:

  • Were owners and traders of enslaved Africans • Instructed genocidal actions upon indigenous communities
  • Created the legal, financial and fiscal policies necessary for the enslavement of Africans
  • Defined and enforced African enslavement and native genocide as in their ‘national interests’
  • Refused compensation to the enslaved with the ending of their enslavement
  • Compensated slave owners at emancipation for the loss of legal property rights in enslaved Africans
  • Imposed a further one hundred years of racial apartheid upon the emancipated
  • Imposed for another one hundred years policies designed to perpetuate suffering upon the emancipated and survivors of genocide
  • And have refused to acknowledge such crimes or to compensate victims and their descendants

Context

The CRC is committed to the process of national international reconciliation. Victims and their descendants have a duty to call for reparatory justice.

Their call for justice is the basis of the closure they seek to the terrible tragedies that engulfed humanity during modernity. The CRC comes into being some two generations after the national independence process, and finds European colonial rule as a persistent part of Caribbean life.

The CRC operates within the context of persistent objection from European governments to its mandate.

The CRC, nonetheless, is optimistic that the CRJP will gain acceptance as a necessary path to progress.

The CRC sees the persistent racial victimization of the descendants of slavery and genocide as the root cause of their suffering today.

The CRC recognizes that the persistent harm and suffering experienced today by these victims as the primary cause of development failure in the Caribbean.

It calls upon European governments to participate in the CRJP with a view to prepare these victims and sufferers for full admission with dignity into the citizenry of the global community. The CRC here outlines the path to reconciliation, truth, and justice for VICTIMS AND THEIR DESCENDANTS.

CRJP: Ten Point Action Plan

1. FULL FORMAL APOLOGY

The healing process for victims and the descendants of the enslaved and enslavers requires as a precondition the offer of a sincere formal apology by the governments of Europe. Some governments in refusing to offer an apology have issued in place Statements of Regrets.

Such statements do not acknowledge that crimes have been committed and represent a refusal to take responsibility for such crimes. Statements of regrets represent, furthermore, a reprehensible response to the call for apology in that they suggest that victims and their descendants are not worthy of an apology. Only an explicit formal apology will suffice within the context of the CRJP.

2. REPATRIATION

Over 10 million Africans were stolen from their homes and forcefully transported to the Caribbean as the enslaved chattel and property of Europeans. The transatlantic slave trade is the largest forced migration in human history and has no parallel in terms of man’s inhumanity to man.

This trade in enchained bodies was a highly successful commercial business for the nations of Europe. The lives of millions of men, women and children were destroyed in search of profit. The descendants of these stolen people have a legal right to return to their homeland.

A Repatriation program must be established and all available channels of international law and diplomacy used to resettle those persons who wish to return. A resettlement program should address such matters as citizenship and deploy available best practices in respect of community re-integration.

3. INDIGENOUS PEOPLES DEVELOPMENT PROGRAM

The governments of Europe committed genocide upon the native Caribbean population. Military commanders were given official instructions by their governments to eliminate these communities and to remove those who survive pogroms from the region.

Genocide and land appropriation went hand in hand. A community of over 3,000,000 in 1700 has been reduced to less than 30,000 in 2000. Survivors remain traumatized, landless, and are the most marginalized social group within the region.

The University of the West Indies offers an Indigenous Peoples Scholarship in a desperate effort at rehabilitation. It is woefully insufficient. A Development Plan is required to rehabilitate this community.

4. CULTURAL INSTITUTIONS

European nations have invested in the development of community institutions such as museums and research centers in order to prepare their citizens for an understanding of these CAH.

These facilities serve to reinforce within the consciousness of their citizens an understanding of their role in history as rulers and change agents.

There are no such institutions in the Caribbean where the CAH were committed. Caribbean schoolteachers and researchers do not have the same opportunity.

Descendants of these CAH continue to suffer the disdain of having no relevant institutional systems through which their experience can be scientifically told. This crisis must be remedies within the CJRP.

5. PUBLIC HEALTH CRISIS

The African descended population in the Caribbean has the highest incidence in the world of chronic diseases in the forms of hypertension and type two diabetes.

This pandemic is the direct result of the nutritional experience, physical and emotional brutality, and overall stress profiles associated with slavery, genocide, and apartheid. Over 10 million Africans were imported into the Caribbean during the 400 years of slavery.

At the end of slavery in the late 19th century less than 2 million remained. The chronic health condition of Caribbean blacks now constitutes the greatest financial risk to sustainability in the region. Arresting this pandemic requires the injection of science, technology, and capital beyond the capacity of the region.

Europe has a responsibility to participate in the alleviation of this heath disaster. The CRJP addresses this issue and calls upon the governments of Europe to take responsibility for this tragic human legacy of slavery and colonisation.

6. ILLITERACY ERADICATION

At the end of the European colonial period in most parts of the Caribbean, the British in particular left the black and indigenous communities in a general state of illiteracy. Some 70 percent of blacks in British colonies were functionally illiterate in the 1960s when nation states began to appear.

Jamaica, the largest such community, was home to the largest number of such citizens. Widespread illiteracy has subverted the development efforts of these nation states and represents a drag upon social and economic advancement.

Caribbean governments allocate more than 70 percent of public expenditure to health and education in an effort to uproot the legacies of slavery and colonization. European governments have a responsibility to participate in this effort within the context of the CRJP.

7. AFRICAN KNOWLEDGE PROGRAM

The forced separation of Africans from their homeland has resulted in cultural and social alienation from identity and existential belonging. Denied the right in law to life, and divorced by space from the source of historic self, Africans have craved the right to return and knowledge of the route to roots.

A program of action is required to build ‘bridges of belonging’. Such projects as school exchanges and culture tours, community artistic and performance programs, entrepreneurial and religious engagements, as well as political interaction, are required in order to neutralize the void created by slave voyages.

Such actions will serve to build knowledge networks that are necessary for community rehabilitation.

8. PSYCHOLOGICAL REHABILITATION

For over 400 years Africans and their descendants were classified in law as non-human, chattel, property, and real estate. They were denied recognition as members of the human family by laws derived from the parliaments and palaces of Europe.

This history has inflicted massive psychological trauma upon African descendant populations. This much is evident daily in the Caribbean.

Only a reparatory justice approach to truth and educational exposure can begin the process of healing and repair. Such an engagement will call into being, for example, the need for greater Caribbean integration designed to enable the coming together of the fragmented community.

9. TECHNOLOGY TRANSFER

For 400 years the trade and production policies of Europe could be summed up in the British slogan: “not a nail is to be made in the colonies”.

The Caribbean was denied participation in Europe’s industrialization process, and was confined to the role of producer and exporter of raw materials. This system was designed to extract maximum value from the region and to enable maximum wealth accumulation in Europe.

The effectiveness of this policy meant that the Caribbean entered its nation building phase as a technologically and scientifically ill-equipped- backward space within the postmodern world economy.

Generations of Caribbean youth, as a consequence, have been denied membership and access to the science and technology culture that is the world’s youth patrimony. Technology transfer and science sharing for development must be a part of the CRJP.

10. DEBT CANCELLATION

Caribbean governments that emerged from slavery and colonialism have inherited the massive crisis of community poverty and institutional unpreparedness for development. These governments still daily engage in the business of cleaning up the colonial mess in order to prepare for development.

The pressure of development has driven governments to carry the burden of public employment and social policies designed to confront colonial legacies. This process has resulted in states accumulating unsustainable levels of public debt that now constitute their fiscal entrapment.

This debt cycle properly belongs to the imperial governments who have made no sustained attempt to deal with debilitating colonial legacies. Support for the payment of domestic debt and cancellation of international debt are necessary reparatory actions.

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Igor Rembotte
Par Igor Rembotte 12 Mar 2014 14:54