It
has been fifteen years since the historic United Nations World
Conference Against Racism took place in Durban, South Africa. We
should always remember the role the Durban 400 played in impacting
the outcome of this most important event in history.
The
Durban 400 was made up of the December 12th Movement International
Secretariat and the National Black United Front (NBUF) that were
leading participants in the United Nations World Conference Against
Racism (WCAR) that was held in Durban, South Africa from August 31st
through September 7, 2001. Because the United States did not agree
with many of the issues being raised at this conference,
particularly, the push by African people worldwide to declare that
the Trans Atlantic Slave Trade and Slavery are a Crime Against
Humanity and that Reparations are owed to African people in the
Diaspora and on the continent of Africa, the United States withdrew
their low level delegation and left only the Ambassador to South
Africa to represent them.
The
role of the United States and Western Europe (WEO) to subvert the
agenda “provided the indisputable proof” that the issues
we fought for, to be included in the Durban Declaration, went to the
“heart of the World Conference Against Racism.” For over
two years, representatives from the Durban 400 traveled throughout
the world attending the various preparatory meetings for the WCAR,
advocating our agenda that was simple and focused: 1) Declaration of
the Trans Atlantic Slave Trade, Slavery, and Colonialism as Crimes
Against Humanity; 2) Reparations for African people on the continent
and in the Diaspora; 3) Recognition of the Economic Base of Racism.
As
the (Non Governmental Organization) International Association Against
Torture pointed out in their intervention at the WCAR, “From
the beginning they were clear (The U.S. and the WEO Group) that a
conference which addressed racism and racial discrimination could
only have one outcome— to subject them to the same human rights
standards which they imperiously demand that the developing world
uncomplainingly submit to and to identify them as perpetrators of
history’s greatest crime against humanity, the Trans Atlantic
Slave Trade and Slavery.”
How
mighty can the United States be without acknowledging, apologizing,
and paying reparations to African people for the Greatest Crime
Against Humanity they participated in, the Trans Atlantic Slave
Trade, Slavery, and Colonialism?
As
researched by the UNESCO Slave Trade Project, the Museum of the
Atlantic Slave Trade, and the Harvard Database on Slave Voyages,
twenty-eight to forty-two million African people were captured and
enslaved between 1441 and 1888… Four to six million Africans,
40% of all captives and slaves, were murdered or died along the
entire “way of death…”
Just
as other people never forget their history and the tragedies and
crimes committed against them, neither should African people.
Therefore, the Durban 400 declared a victory in contributing to the
final outcome of the Durban Declaration that reflects the interests
of African people by citing:
“We
acknowledge that slavery and the slave trade, including the
transatlantic
slave trade, were appalling tragedies in the history
of
humanity not only because of their abhorrent barbarism but
also
in terms of their magnitude, organized nature and especially
their
negation of the essence of the victims and further acknowledge
that
slavery and the slave trade are a crime against humanity and
should
always have been so…”
Although
the language of the Durban Declaration did not specifically call for
reparations for African people, it is now our duty to intensify our
organizing in demanding the United States Government and U. S.
Corporations pay reparations. We must continue to educate the African
Community of America on the continued need to organize and revitalize
the Reparations Movement.
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