استفادة بريطانيا من تعويضات مالكي العبيد تاريخيا

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04-14-2013, 04:50 AM

Rihab Khalifa
<aRihab Khalifa
تاريخ التسجيل: 07-07-2006
مجموع المشاركات: 3738

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Re: استفادة بريطانيا من تعويضات مالكي العبيد تاريخيا (Re: Rihab Khalifa)

    Caribbean360: The case for compensating the Caribbean

    The case for compensating the Caribbean
    ================================================================================
    Chris Hoyos on 12/04/2013 11:58:00

    Sir Ronald Sanders
    BRIDGETOWN, Barbados, Friday April 12, 2013 - In 1838, British slave owners in
    the English-Speaking Caribbean received £11.6 (US$17.8) billion in today’s
    value as compensation for the emancipation of their “property” – 655,780
    human beings of African descent that they had enslaved, brutalised and
    exploited. The freed slaves, by comparison, received nothing in recompense for
    their dehumanisation, their cruel treatment, the abuse of their labour and the
    plain injustice of their enslavement.
    The monies paid to slaves owners have been studied and assembled by a team of
    Academics from University College London, including Dr Nick Draper, who spent
    three years pulling together 46,000 records which they have now launched as an
    internet database. The website is: ucl.ac.uk/lbs.
    The benefits of those monies still exist in Britain today. For example, they are
    the foundations of Barclays Bank, Lloyds Bank and the Royal Bank of Scotland.
    But they are also the basis of wealth for many leading British and Scottish
    families among them the Hogg family – two of whom became Lord Chancellors in
    British governments.
    Dr Draper is reported as saying of the Hogg family: “To have two Lord
    Chancellors in Britain in the 20th century bearing the name of a slave-owner
    from British Guiana (now Guyana), who went penniless to British Guiana, came
    back a very wealthy man and contributed to the formation of this political
    dynasty, which incorporated his name into their children in recognition – it
    seems to me to be an illuminating story and a potent example."
    The Hogg family were not unique. The wealth and political good fortune of 19th
    Century British Prime Minister William Gladstone had its origins in the £83
    (US$127.6) million, at today’s value, of “compensation” given to his
    father, John Gladstone, for slaves he owned in British Guiana and Jamaica.
    But it was not individual families alone that helped to create African slavery
    and that benefitted from it; it was the British state as whole – its
    successive governments that provided subsidies for the trade; that adopted
    legislation that facilitated it; and that were complicit with the governments of
    their colonies in adopting laws that designated African slaves as “real
    estate” – people stripped of human identity, including life, and,
    therefore, to be treated like land, houses and buildings.
    Remarkably, it was also the British State, including the British people, who
    paid “compensation” to the slave owners while completely disregarding any
    obligation whatsoever to 655,780 people, who were enslaved and cruelly
    exploited. To do so, the British government borrowed £20 million which is
    £76 (US$117) billion, at today’s value, from the Rothschild Banking Empire.
    The sum amounted to about 40 per cent of the country’s Gross Domestic Product
    at the time. As Caribbean Economic Historian, Sir Hilary Beckles points out:
    “They all recognised that British citizens were socially empowered by the
    white supremacy culture so effectively institutionalized on a global scale by
    slave owners”.
    British exploitation of people in the Caribbean did not start, or end, with the
    enslavement of Africans. In a new book entitled, ‘Britain’s Black Debt:
    Reparations for Caribbean Slavery and Native Genocide’, Beckles, records the
    systematic “elimination” of the Kalinagos – the original people of the
    Eastern Caribbean islands. It was the first act of genocide in the Western
    Hemisphere, and it was executed with the full knowledge and approval of the
    British authorities.
    African slavery was followed in some Caribbean countries – Guyana, Trinidad
    and Tobago and Suriname in particular - by indentured servitude of people from
    India bonded to an estate and its owners, deprived of normal liberties,
    subjected to cruel and inhuman treatment. It was what the respected British
    historian, Hugh Tinker, described as “another kind of slavery”.
    Each of these episodes of subjugation, exploitation and brutalisation of human
    beings was justified on the racial supremacy of the white race. And while
    Britain was the principal beneficiary, other European nations – France, Spain
    and Portugal especially – shared in the spoils of human degradation.
    Except for the blindest and unrelenting apologists for the acts of genocide and
    enslavement, it is impossible to discard Beckles’ assertion that these were
    “crimes against humanity”. As he says: “The wealth of the (British)
    Empire required the abandonment of all known laws, conventions, moral
    parameters, political practices and legal frameworks and the creation of a new
    and unprecedented labour system”.
    When the vast majority of the original people of the Caribbean were extinguished
    forcing the brutalised handful who remained into submission; when slavery was
    abolished with no recompense to the Africans for the deprivation of their
    liberty, the people of the Caribbean were left destitute, deprived and
    disadvantaged. In Beckles’ words:“They got nothing by way of cash
    reparations to carry them into freedom. No land grants were provided. No
    promissory notes were posted”.
    That today the people of the Caribbean have built modern societies despite the
    conditions they were handed at slavery’s abolition, is a tribute to the
    resilience, capabilities and high quality of human beings that European states
    considered ‘chattel and real estate’. That they have produced Nobel Prize
    winners, great athletes and fine intellectual thinkers who have commanded high
    positions in the international community in business, medicine, the law, and
    technology is testimony to the wrongness of the “white” supremacist
    doctrine.
    Their achievement re-enforces the position that their enslavement, their
    servitude and the infamous acts of violence against them were wrong, and it
    cannot be right that those who were the principal perpetrators of those wrongs
    benefitted while they were left as nothing more than a human catastrophe.
    The Caribbean would today have been much further along the road of social and
    economic development if even half of the “compensation” given to slave
    owners had been given to slavery’s victims 175 years ago.
    There is a compelling case for reparations to the nations of the Caribbean on
    behalf of the people who were the victims of slavery. Nick Draper and the team
    and University College London, and Hilary Beckles in his new book have provided
    the basis for, at the very least, a reparations dialogue. Click here to receive
    free news bulletins via email from Caribbean360. (View sample)
    The opinions expressed in this commentary are solely those of Sir Ronald
    Sanders. Sir Ronald Sanders is a Consultant and former Caribbean diplomat.


    Source
    شكرا للصديقة مارسيا من الكاريبيان للفت النظر للمقال.
    اعلاه المقال كامل بالانجليزي و المصدر.
                  

العنوان الكاتب Date
استفادة بريطانيا من تعويضات مالكي العبيد تاريخيا Rihab Khalifa04-14-13, 04:42 AM
  Re: استفادة بريطانيا من تعويضات مالكي العبيد تاريخيا Rihab Khalifa04-14-13, 04:47 AM
    Re: استفادة بريطانيا من تعويضات مالكي العبيد تاريخيا Rihab Khalifa04-14-13, 04:50 AM
      Re: استفادة بريطانيا من تعويضات مالكي العبيد تاريخيا Rihab Khalifa04-14-13, 04:55 AM
        Re: استفادة بريطانيا من تعويضات مالكي العبيد تاريخيا Rihab Khalifa04-14-13, 05:12 AM
          Re: استفادة بريطانيا من تعويضات مالكي العبيد تاريخيا Rihab Khalifa04-14-13, 05:17 AM
      Re: استفادة بريطانيا من تعويضات مالكي العبيد تاريخيا HAYDER GASIM04-14-13, 05:55 AM
        Re: استفادة بريطانيا من تعويضات مالكي العبيد تاريخيا بريمة محمد04-14-13, 06:12 AM
          Re: استفادة بريطانيا من تعويضات مالكي العبيد تاريخيا saadeldin abdelrahman04-14-13, 02:16 PM
            Re: استفادة بريطانيا من تعويضات مالكي العبيد تاريخيا Rihab Khalifa04-14-13, 04:03 PM
              Re: استفادة بريطانيا من تعويضات مالكي العبيد تاريخيا Rihab Khalifa04-14-13, 06:42 PM
                Re: استفادة بريطانيا من تعويضات مالكي العبيد تاريخيا Rihab Khalifa04-15-13, 03:25 PM
                  Re: استفادة بريطانيا من تعويضات مالكي العبيد تاريخيا Rihab Khalifa06-06-13, 05:41 AM


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