By Enyichukwu Enemanna
Gold-rich West African nation, Ghana on Thursday hosted a historic global conference where it is seeking for the growing political support for slavery reparations to be translated into practical commitments towards justice.
The conference in the capital, Accra brought together leaders from around the African continent and the Caribbean. It comes few months after the United Nations adopted a landmark resolution that declared the transatlantic slave trade “the gravest crime against humanity”.
Since adoption of the resolution in March, the campaign for reparations has gathered “unprecedented momentum”, Ghana’s Foreign Minister Samuel Ablakwa stated.
The resolution championed by Ghanaian President John Mahama, though not binding goes beyond simple acknowledgement, but asks nations involved in the slave trade to engage in “restitution” and “compensation”.
“We won the battle against slavery, we won the battle against colonialism, we won the battle against apartheid, and we are confident that we shall win the battle against reparatory injustice,” Ablakwa told the conference.
The adoption of the UN resolution is seen as the strongest endorsement so far by the international community of the case for reparations, garnering the support of 123 UN member states.
Since then, French President Emmanuel Macron has endorsed the symbolic repeal of royal decrees that governed slavery in French colonies. He has said the issue of reparations must be addressed, while warning against making “false promises”.
Speaking to the Accra conference virtually, Macron said history cannot be “reduced to a merely financial logic”.
The French were the third-largest slave traders in Europe, after the British and the Portuguese.
Pope Leo XIV last month issued an apology for the Catholic Church’s centuries-long delay in condemning slavery, calling it “a wound in Christian memory”.
“The growing international support for these conversations demonstrates that reparatory justice is no longer a peripheral issue,” Ghana’s foreign minister said.
President Mahama announced the creation of three working panels to explore practical pathways to reparatory justice.
One will be an advisory panel led by heads of state, another a group of experts focused on restitution, and a third examining the legal aspects of reparations.
“The question before us is not whether history can be changed — it cannot — but whether we have the courage to confront it honestly and the determination to turn recognition into meaningful action,” said Mahama.
The line-up of speakers at the three-day event included the leaders of Barbados, Sierra Leone, Senegal, Namibia and Liberia, alongside Nigerian Nobel literature prize winner and global rights activist Wole Soyinka.
Soyinka said reparation “must go beyond symbolism”.
“It is not merely about apology or compensation — it is about the rehumanisation of memory and the restoration of values that were distorted by centuries of dehumanisation,” he said.
He also cautioned about seeking justice for the past without confronting current failures, “including the ways in which we still commodify human lives on this continent today”, citing the kidnapping of school children for ransom, a common crime in his home country.




































