KINGSTON, Jamaica--Government is adamant that descendants of enslaved Africans deserve and should get reparations, and it says it’s not backing down from getting them.
That’s according to Minister without Portfolio in the Office of the Prime Minister, Mike Henry, who says that while the smatterings of compensation from a few organizations is a good place to start, and the country is encouraged by the show of support, a piecemeal approach is not the best way for Jamaica to attain full and satisfactory payment for slavery and its effects.
“There will be no moving on as though nothing happened. We are not listening to that kind of talk. The world knows what happened to our people during slavery because it is well documented,” he said on Monday.
Stating that slavery was the greatest crime against humanity, Minister Henry said that “our call for compensation is serious business. The wrongs of slavery cannot be made right by anything less than a robust country-to-country response.
“Small, individual settlements from the few enlightened do not remove or lessen the obligation of former mother countries to nations that were their colonies,” he added.
Henry said Jamaica wants acceptance of the moral wrongness of the system of slavery; acknowledgment of the harm that was caused; recognition of the continuing impact on lives today; confession of the immense benefit gained by European countries and, of course, full and final monetary compensation to Jamaica.
“Nothing less will clear the debt,” he stressed, adding that slavery did not just cause physical and emotional harm, noting that it had more far-reaching effects.
“In fact, the psychological impact remains with us today and it will not go away with sweet talk, arrogant dismissiveness, nor delay tactics. We will not merely forgive and forget.
“The Europeans enriched themselves on the backs of slaves in the Caribbean and built their empires with wealth extracted from this region. Today, we struggle under the weight of underdevelopment and unrealised potential. Fulsome compensation will put us at a place to begin the process of repairing some of the damage that was done,” Minister Henry insisted.
In the meanwhile, the Minister congratulated the participants in the JIS Heritage Competition Awards, which included essay, poster, and photography elements focused on the topic of reparation.
He made the comments at the ninth staging of the Jamaica Information Service (JIS) annual Heritage Competition Awards Ceremony, and he encouraged the students to position themselves to continue the fight for compensation for slavery.
“I want to put the baton in capable, steady hands. It’s time for this generation… to get in position. Indeed, the run is far from over, but a win in this matter is certain. I plan to be at the finish line, and, who knows… I might just participate in the victory lap,” he said. ~ Caribbean360 ~