Berliner Boersenzeitung - UK treads fine line on slavery legacy, while ruling out reparations

EUR -
AED 4.260899
AFN 80.158362
ALL 97.735274
AMD 445.179278
ANG 2.076169
AOA 1063.779861
ARS 1463.486047
AUD 1.792452
AWG 2.088118
AZN 1.974728
BAM 1.95178
BBD 2.340889
BDT 140.63036
BGN 1.95826
BHD 0.437391
BIF 3454.928951
BMD 1.160066
BND 1.489252
BOB 8.0115
BRL 6.460393
BSD 1.159302
BTN 99.605994
BWP 15.658749
BYN 3.794102
BYR 22737.288604
BZD 2.328814
CAD 1.594679
CDF 3347.9497
CHF 0.932003
CLF 0.029263
CLP 1122.94367
CNY 8.328167
CNH 8.33219
COP 4656.503901
CRC 585.005217
CUC 1.160066
CUP 30.741742
CVE 110.036947
CZK 24.640086
DJF 206.453013
DKK 7.463164
DOP 69.917205
DZD 151.014813
EGP 57.341587
ERN 17.400986
ETB 160.401527
FJD 2.623488
FKP 0.864042
GBP 0.865328
GEL 3.143771
GGP 0.864042
GHS 12.086108
GIP 0.864042
GMD 82.940384
GNF 10061.710714
GTQ 8.895602
GYD 242.550447
HKD 9.104376
HNL 30.329234
HRK 7.534857
HTG 152.227786
HUF 399.448339
IDR 18956.518334
ILS 3.889979
IMP 0.864042
INR 99.741413
IQD 1518.758894
IRR 48867.769059
ISK 142.212385
JEP 0.864042
JMD 185.389772
JOD 0.822444
JPY 172.386353
KES 149.89266
KGS 101.447527
KHR 4647.468203
KMF 490.998058
KPW 1044.023294
KRW 1612.653915
KWD 0.354597
KYD 0.966102
KZT 611.425446
LAK 24996.302498
LBP 103894.475134
LKR 349.611452
LRD 232.449247
LSL 20.810859
LTL 3.425372
LVL 0.701712
LYD 6.297974
MAD 10.489396
MDL 19.685287
MGA 5109.476595
MKD 61.433208
MMK 2434.949069
MNT 4160.305368
MOP 9.374112
MRU 46.177008
MUR 53.013435
MVR 17.862069
MWK 2010.359492
MXN 21.80703
MYR 4.929151
MZN 74.197206
NAD 20.811127
NGN 1772.375916
NIO 42.664336
NOK 11.957657
NPR 159.373504
NZD 1.958297
OMR 0.446035
PAB 1.159312
PEN 4.128397
PGK 4.783241
PHP 66.330271
PKR 330.618959
PLN 4.257488
PYG 8977.43282
QAR 4.215681
RON 5.071925
RSD 117.141075
RUB 90.923269
RWF 1675.264091
SAR 4.351203
SBD 9.635204
SCR 17.033332
SDG 696.613537
SEK 11.308327
SGD 1.491752
SHP 0.91163
SLE 26.275321
SLL 24326.00322
SOS 662.541151
SRD 43.065701
STD 24011.01876
SVC 10.14402
SYP 15082.997499
SZL 20.772039
THB 37.668435
TJS 11.100642
TMT 4.071831
TND 3.367089
TOP 2.716992
TRY 46.732796
TTD 7.866831
TWD 34.148279
TZS 3027.771466
UAH 48.548111
UGX 4154.443567
USD 1.160066
UYU 46.893016
UZS 14819.839482
VES 135.687081
VND 30338.619398
VUV 138.785447
WST 3.201936
XAF 654.614408
XAG 0.030698
XAU 0.000348
XCD 3.135135
XDR 0.814123
XOF 654.603146
XPF 119.331742
YER 279.981816
ZAR 20.735926
ZMK 10441.981556
ZMW 26.433672
ZWL 373.540697
  • CMSC

    0.0900

    22.314

    +0.4%

  • CMSD

    0.0250

    22.285

    +0.11%

  • RBGPF

    0.0000

    69.04

    0%

  • SCS

    0.0400

    10.74

    +0.37%

  • RELX

    0.0300

    53

    +0.06%

  • RIO

    -0.1400

    59.33

    -0.24%

  • GSK

    0.1300

    41.45

    +0.31%

  • NGG

    0.2700

    71.48

    +0.38%

  • BP

    0.1750

    30.4

    +0.58%

  • BTI

    0.7150

    48.215

    +1.48%

  • BCC

    0.7900

    91.02

    +0.87%

  • JRI

    0.0200

    13.13

    +0.15%

  • VOD

    0.0100

    9.85

    +0.1%

  • BCE

    -0.0600

    22.445

    -0.27%

  • RYCEF

    0.1000

    12

    +0.83%

  • AZN

    -0.1200

    73.71

    -0.16%

UK treads fine line on slavery legacy, while ruling out reparations
UK treads fine line on slavery legacy, while ruling out reparations / Photo: William WEST - POOL/AFP

UK treads fine line on slavery legacy, while ruling out reparations

Commonwealth countries want talks on slavery reparations but the United Kingdom -- engaged in soul-searching over its former empire for several years now -- is not open to financial compensation, officials and analysts say.

Text size:

"I think segments of British society might be ready to talk about reparation but you have other sectors, the majority really, that strongly oppose it," Sascha Auerbach, director of the Institute for the Study of Slavery at Nottingham University, told AFP.

Meeting last week at a summit in Samoa, the Commonwealth's 56 members said the "time has come" for talks about the legacy of the transatlantic slave trade, in a landmark declaration that raised the prospect of future reparations.

African, Caribbean and Pacific nations want Britain -- and other colonial powers -- to apologise for slavery and other ills of colonisation, and to start talks about compensation.

Labour Prime Minister Keir Starmer, a former human rights lawyer, has rejected both requests, arguing that he wants to "look forward" rather than have "very long endless discussions about reparations" involving the past.

"I think he is concerned that the country is not ready to have this conversation," said Alan Lester, a historian at the University of Sussex, noting that any talk of restorative justice a few months after far-right riots rocked England is seen as politically risky.

The issue is divisive. Figures in centre-left Labour -- which came to power in July -- have long been open to the debate, but the Conservatives reject it outright.

Robert Jenrick, one of the candidates to be the new Tory leader, has said that criticising the British Empire is anti-patriotic.

He wrote recently that "the territories colonised by our empire were not advanced democracies".

"Many had been cruel, slave-trading powers. Some had never been independent. The British empire broke the long chain of violent tyranny as we came to introduce -- gradually and imperfectly -- Christian values," he added.

While Britain has expressed remorse for slavery in broad terms, London has baulked at the idea of paying financial reparations, which would likely come with a hefty price tag.

A 2023 report co-authored by a United Nations judge, Patrick Robinson, concluded that the UK likely owed more than £18 trillion (or 21 trillion euros) for its involvement in slavery in 14 countries.

This figure took into account the unpaid wages of slaves, trauma caused, and damages owed to their descendants.

So far, the Commonwealth countries have not put forward any figures of their own.

"It's very unlikely that countries would ask for that figure," Lester, the historian, told AFP.

Auerbach suspects that money is not the countries' "main goal".

"What they want is recognition and accountability," he said.

Opponents in Britain point out that a public apology could open the doors to legal action against the country. Auerbach notes that the Netherlands' government and king apologised last year for slavery and has not yet been sued.

For its part, the British royal family has so far stopped short of apologising.

King Charles III did, however, on a visit to Kenya last year, express his "greatest sorrow and deepest regret" over the "abhorrent and unjustifiable acts of violence committed against Kenyans" during colonial rule.

"It's a delicate subject. I would say that the monarchy has navigated this debate very skillfully," Professor Pauline Maclaran at Royal Holloway, University of London, told AFP.

Other British institutions have issued apologies or owned up to mistakes, including the Church of England which officially said sorry in 2020.

The National Trust, which protects heritage sites, published a report the same year detailing links between dozens of properties it runs and the slave trade.

Earlier this year, the esteemed Royal Academy of Arts held an exhibition about how British art was implicated by slavery -- a first in its more than two centuries of existence.

"At least we're having the conversation in the Anglo-Saxon world, which is not the case in Spain or France," said Auerbach.

(F.Schuster--BBZ)