Caricom Reparations Commission identifies six key areas for action

Chairman of the Caricom Reparations Commission Sir Hilary Beckles announced that public health has been identified as one of six key issues to receive reparatory diplomacy and action.

Sir Hilary made this announcement at a press conference last week Tuesday following a meeting of the representatives from the Commission with law firm Leigh Day on Monday at the UWI Mona Campus, a press statement from the Caricom Secretariat said.

“The African descended population in the Caribbean today has the highest incidence in the world of chronic diseases such as hypertension and type two diabetes,” the professor said, adding that it was a direct result of their nutritional exposure, endemic inhumane physical and emotional brutalization and other aspects of the stress experience of slavery and post slavery apartheid.

Education was the second issue identified. Sir Hilary said that at the end of the colonial period the British left the African descended population in a state of general illiteracy. “…This illiteracy continued to plague Caribbean societies and accounted for significant parts of their development challenges,” he said.

Speaking to cultural institutions, the commission chairman said that there was no development of institutions such as museums and research centres to prepare Caribbean citizens for an understanding of their history. He identified cultural deprivation as another issue that needed to be addressed and outlined that the primary cultural effect of slavery was to break and eradicate African commitment to their culture.

Sir Hilary also stated that African culture was criminalised and pointed to how Caribbean people were affected by cultural deprivation. He said this included low ethnic self-esteem; the devaluation of black identity; broken structures and diminished family values; delegitimisation of African derived religious and cultural practices, and disconnection from ancestral roots and culture.

Psychological trauma was also identified as a key area of focus. According to Sir Hilary, during the time of slavery, Africans were classified in law as non-human, chattel, property and real estate.  He said they were denied recognition as members of the human family by laws and practices derived from the parliaments and policies of Europe. This history has inflicted massive psychological damage upon African descendants and is evident daily in social life, Sir Hilary said.

The sixth issue which the Commission said needed to be remedied was that of scientific and technological backwardness.

The chairman highlighted that for 400 years the policy of Britain and Europe had been that the Caribbean should not participate in any manufacturing or industrial process, and should be confined to the production of raw materials.

This policy, according to the professor, “has rendered the Caribbean a technologically and scientifically ill-equipped civilization for which it continues to experience debilitating backwardness in a science and technology globalized world.” Additionally, he said that the subjection of the Caribbean to this state has denied Caribbean youth membership and access to an enhancing science and technology culture that has become the world youth patrimony.

Sir Hilary also explained that the argument that Caricom should request reparatory dialogue with beneficiary slave-owning European states with a view to formulating a new development agenda for the Caribbean was reaffirmed.

The next meeting of the full commission will be in January 2014 and it is anticipated that its first interim report will be ready for submission to the Caricom Heads of Government meeting in February 2014.