Dear Editor,
When the United Nations General Assembly voted last week to recognize the transatlantic slave trade as the “gravest crime against humanity”—a resolution championed by Ghana—the applause that followed echoed far beyond the marble chambers of New York. It carried with it the sighs and long-suppressed hopes of millions whose lives, histories, and humanity were stolen, rewritten, or forgotten under four centuries of slavery and colonial plunder.
The vote—123 nations in favour, three against, and 52 abstentions—was a global reckoning long overdue. Non-binding though it may be, its moral force cannot be dismissed. Ghana’s leadership in steering such a measure through a divided chamber signals the Global South’s growing determination to claim authorship of its own justice narrative—a narrative that no longer waits for Western sanction, but asserts moral principle from the margins of geopolitical power.
President John Dramani Mahama’s words—“Let it be recorded that when history beckoned, we did what was right for the memory of the millions who suffered the indignity of slavery”—summon a truth that the world’s dominant powers have tried to sidestep: that reconciliation requires remembrance, and remembrance demands accountability.
The Politics of Forgetting
The opposition and abstentions from Western nations—among them the United States, Israel, the United Kingdom, and the European Union—speak volumes about an enduring discomfort. They represent the evasive diplomacy of those who prefer historical amnesia to moral debt.
For centuries, enslaved Africans were commodified, generating the capital that built Western prosperity and financed industrial civilization. That same past now shadows global inequality, from the racial wealth gap to the uneven development of nations. Yet, even in 2026, Western governments struggle to move beyond polite regret. The reluctance to call slavery what it was—an organized crime against humanity—betrays a deeper fear: that moral admission would invite material obligation.
Europe’s carefully worded abstentions are, in truth, a moral failing masked as pragmatism—a polite nod to history that avoids looking it in the eye.
CARICOM’s Long Road to Reparative Justice
For the Caribbean Community, this UN vote is the vindication of a decades-long struggle to define reparations not as vengeance, but as moral restoration. CARICOM’s Reparations Commission, under the intellectual and diplomatic leadership of Sir Hilary Beckles, has carried this banner with philosophical clarity and historical rigor.
Sir Hilary has argued, time and again, that reparations are not about dividing humanity by guilt, but about reuniting it through justice. The Ghana resolution strengthens his hand—and CARICOM’s—in the international arena, embedding the call for reparatory justice within the moral consensus of the world’s highest multilateral body.
Already, several CARICOM leaders have welcomed the outcome as “a landmark in the unfinished business of decolonization.” Sources within the Reparations Commission describe the resolution as a breakthrough that “internationalizes the Caribbean moral claim.” It gives fresh legitimacy to CARICOM’s 10-Point Plan for Reparations, from formal apologies to debt cancellation and development support for descendant nations.
Guyana’s Moment of Moral Leadership
Though largely absent from initial coverage, Guyana has its own stake—and history—in this global development. President Irfaan Ali, in the early years of his first term, was one of the strongest voices in Caribbean politics calling for reparations as both a moral imperative and a developmental necessity. His insistence that “the legacies of slavery and indentureship must be addressed through structural redress” reflected a willingness to confront uncomfortable truths about the colonial inheritance shaping our society today.
Yet, in recent regional forums, Guyana’s voice on reparations has grown quieter—perhaps absorbed by the demands of rapid economic transformation or geopolitical balancing in the oil era. Ghana’s victory now offers a timely occasion for Guyana to reassert that moral leadership, to link its development narrative to a philosophy of justice that transcends profit and speaks to principle.
For a country whose population and culture were born of displacement, forced labour, and resilience, our diplomatic voice on this issue carries both legitimacy and responsibility. This is not a foreign debate—it is our very foundation crying out for recognition.
Healing through Remembering
What Ghana has achieved is a moral reaffirmation: that history must not only be written by the victors, but redeemed by the victims. The resolution transforms remembrance into resistance, asserting that memorialization without justice is merely commemoration.
For the Caribbean, this vote is a clarion call—to transform empathy into action, and symbolism into policy. Reparations must move from the moral to the material: through education reforms that teach our history truthfully, cultural investment that restores pride, debt negotiations that acknowledge stolen labour, and partnerships that deliver reparative development.
Ghana has reminded the world that when history beckons, moral nations answer. Guyana, too, must lift its voice in this global conversation—not as a passenger in the reparations movement, but as one of its navigators.
In doing so, we honour those whose pain built our world—and we ensure that their memory builds a more just one.
Note: The Author maintains that justice must never be time-barred. The moral authority of post-colonial nations rests not on silence but on truth-telling. Ghana’s leadership in this historic vote reawakens the Caribbean conscience, reminding us that political independence without historical redress is an unfinished freedom.