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Europe, US Adamant as Tinubu, African Leaders Set to Discuss Slavery Reparations
•Debate to include land restitution, return of cultural artefacts
Emmanuel Addeh in Abuja
African leaders, including Nigeria’s President Bola Tinubu, meeting in Ethiopia this weekend are to launch a new push for slavery and colonial reparations.
However, they can expect to be stonewalled by former colonial powers, most of which have ruled out making amends for historical wrongs, international news agency, Reuters said yesterday.
Tinubu departed Nigeria last week Wednesday for Paris, France, on a private visit en route to Addis Ababa, the Ethiopian capital. In Addis Ababa, Tinubu will join African leaders at the 46th Ordinary Session of the Executive Council and the 38th Ordinary Session of the Assembly of the AU Heads of State, which ends February 16, a presidency statement said.
While the issue of reparations has gained momentum worldwide, so has the backlash. US President Donald Trump has said he “doesn’t see it (reparations) happening” and many of Europe’s leaders have opposed even talking about it.
At the AU summit in Addis Ababa, leaders plan to shape a “unified vision” of what reparations may look like, from financial compensation and formal acknowledgement of past wrongs to policy reforms.
“Reparations is the hot topic in Addis Ababa,” the AU’s Economic, Social and Cultural Council, ECOSOCC, wrote on X.
From the 15th to the 19th century, at least 12.5 million Africans were kidnapped, forcibly transported by mostly European merchants and sold into slavery.
The AU body added that the debate on reparations needs to address the legacy of colonialism and slavery today, from racism to the economic disparities between Africa and wealthy Western nations.
“It is increasingly becoming impossible to not acknowledge the damage caused by slavery and colonialism,” said Zimbabwean lawyer and reparations expert, Alfred Mavedzenge.
The continent’s debt crisis can be traced back to African nations being saddled with heavy debts upon independence. Climate change can also be linked to colonialism: Africa is responsible for just a fraction of carbon emissions, but its fragile ecosystems have borne the brunt of global warming.
Much of the debate around reparations, particularly in former colonial powers such as Britain and Portugal, has focused on financial payments, but advocates say making amends for the past can take many forms.
“Reparations are more than just compensation,” said ECOSOCC’s head of secretariat, William Carew. “It is about… ensuring future generations inherit a world that acknowledges their past and propels them towards a brighter future,” Carew added.
The AU said in a statement that reparations for Africa could entail land restitution in countries where land was taken from indigenous populations to the return of cultural artefacts.






