In 1999, the National Black United
Front (NBUF) joined forces with the December 12th Movement
in organizing a delegation of Africans in America to attend the
United Nations World Conference Against Racism. The conference was
held in Durban, South Africa from August 31st to September
7, 2001. They became known as the Durban 400. We should never forget
the impact and significance of this organizing project.
The December 12th
Movement International Secretariat, the International Association
Against Torture, North South XXI has official Non-Governmental
Organization (NGO) status with the United Nations. Over the last
thirty years, this group has committed much of its organizing efforts
to participating in the United Nations Human Rights Commission by
presenting numerous issues that impact African people in America.
They were NBUF’s eyes and ears at the U.N.
As Atty. Roger Wareham of the
December 12th Movement recently revealed in an article
circulated on the internet, “Since 1997, when the U.N. agreed
to hold this World Conference, the United States, Canada, and Western
Europe (the WEO Group of countries) have done all they can to prevent
it from succeeding.”
In the spring of 1998, at the
African Group meeting during the Commission on Human Rights in
Geneva, a Resolution was drafted identifying the Trans Atlantic
Slave Trade as a Crime Against Humanity. The United States
used all of its influence and blocked the resolution. However, this
did not stop the momentum throughout the African World to pursue this
resolution’s becoming an official position of the United
Nations World Conference Against Racism.
At the African Regional Preparatory
Conference, for the World Conference Against Racism, held in Dakar,
Senegal (January 22-24, 2001), the African Ministers developed what
has been called the “Dakar Declaration.” In their
deliberations, they affirmed, in part, the following:
- Affirm that the slave trade is a unique tragedy
in the history of humanity, particularly against Africans— a crime
against humanity which is unparalleled, not only in its abhorrent
barbaric feature, but also, in terms of its enormous magnitude, its
institutionalized nature, its transnational dimension and especially
its negation of the human nature of the victims.
- Further affirm that the consequences of this
tragedy accentuated by those of colonialism and apartheid, have
resulted in substantial and lasting economic, political, and cultural
damage caused to the descendants of the victims, the perpetuation of
the prejudice against Africans on the continent and people of African
descent in the Diaspora.
- Strongly reaffirm that States which
pursued racist policies or acts of racial discrimination, such as
slavery, colonialism, and apartheid, should assume
their full responsibilities and provide adequate reparations
to those States, communities and individuals who were victims of
such racist policies or acts, regardless of when or by whom they
were committed.
International law supports the
position that the enslavement of Africans was a crime against
humanity. The Charter of the Nuremberg Tribunal defined
crimes against humanity in this manner: “Murder, extermination,
enslavement, deportation, and other inhumane acts committed against
any civilian population… whether or not in violation of the
domestic law of the country where perpetuated.”
The African Reparations Movement
explains that, “Historians and their experts can show, without
difficulty, how the invasion of African territories, the mass capture
of Africans, the horrors of the middle passage, the chattelization of
Africans in America, and the extermination of the language and
culture of the transported Africans, constituted violations of all
these international laws.” Thus, the Trans Atlantic Slave
Trade was a Crime Against Humanity and, it is clear, African people
are owed reparations throughout the world.
We must regain the momentum that the
Reparations Movement had in the first few years of this century. The
U.N. World Conference Against Racism in Durban, South Africa
(recognizing the Trans-Atlantic Slave Trade and Slave Trade and
slavery as a crime against Humanity for which reparations was due);
the major national reparations demonstration (Millions for
Reparations, in D.C. in August 2002): the Reparations lawsuits filed
against transnational corporations (i.e., Aetna, AIG, J. P. M<organ
Chase, Lloyds of London, New York Life Insurance, CSX Rail, et.al.)
and municipalities (i.e., Tulsa, Oklahoma for the 1921 Black Wall
Street bombing and massacre); the state and local legislation
requiring corporations to disclose their historical ties to the
Trans-Atlantic Slave Trade and slavery all helped to clarify and
popularize the concept of reparations as a legitimate and attainable
demand in the minds of our people.
The New York Times revealed,
“A conference on racism this summer could be one of the most
explosive meetings this organization (United Nations) has ever held,
with moves afoot to cast globalization as a racial issue and to
demand reparations for the slave trade and colonialism.”
For more than thirty years, the
December 12th Movement International Secretariat has
fought in defense of the human rights of African people at the United
Nations, in both Switzerland and New York. During this time, they
have come to help us understand that while we, as African people, may
not recognize the importance of the international agency to the
progress of our struggle, but the United States and its allies are
crystal clear about it.
NBUF agreed with the December 12th
Movement that we must continue to organize at the international level
in bringing the issues of African people before the world and
especially the issue of Reparations.
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