ITUC-Africa Commends Ghana on UN Resolution

By Helen Shok Jok, Abuja

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The International Trade Union Confederation ITUC-Africa has commended Ghana for its leadership on the United Nations General Assembly resolution on transatlantic slavery.

The Pan-African organisation expressed satisfaction with Ghana’s role in advancing the resolution, which recognises transatlantic slavery as one of the gravest crimes against humanity and calls for reparatory justice.

The commendation was contained in a sustainable signed by the General Secretary of ITUC-Africa, Comrade Joel Odigie.

20260327 – ITUC-ITUC Africa statement on slavery remediation

Odigie said that, “The resolution affirms that the legacy of transatlantic slavery persists in structural inequalities, racial injustice, and underdevelopment affecting Africa and its diaspora.

“It must now be followed by concrete measures, including formal apologies, restitution, compensation, and guarantees of non-repetition.”

He said that the development reinforces the ITUC and ITUC-Africa’s long-standing position, advanced through its debt campaign, that Africa’s current debt burdens are rooted in historical injustices and structural imbalances in the global economic system.

“Therefore, ITUC-Africa calls on other African governments and institutions to stand with Ghana and advance a common continental agenda on reparations.

“The ITUC calls on governments worldwide to support this African leadership and its call for justice in solidarity,”Odigie explained

He however emphasised that the struggle extends beyond recognition.

The ITUC-Africa Scribe posited that the structures that sustained slavery-extractivism, labour exploitation, and external control of African economies persist in new forms.

Odigie said; “Unequal trade relations, resource extraction, and debt dependency continue to constrain development and undermine workers’ rights.

“For African workers, these realities are reflected in precarious employment, weak industrialisation, limited value addition, persistent inequality, and widespread energy poverty.

“The call for reparatory justice is inseparable from the struggle for economic transformation, energy sovereignty, and social justice.”

“Further, we continue to argue and advocate for corrections of these ills by insisting that a cease-and-desist socio-economic arrangement towards Africa, especially by advanced economies that directly and indirectly participated and benefited from Africa’s slavery pains, be put in place, and commensurate compensations are made, including the halt to Illicit Financial Flows (IFFs) and debt forgiveness,” he stated.

According to ITUC-Africa, this resolution must lead to action. Africa’s freedom will be realised through economic emancipation through control of its resources, transformation of its economies, and delivery of decent work and social justice.

ITUC and ITUC-Africa call on the international community, particularly former colonial powers, to engage in dialogue on reparations and take concrete steps toward justice.

 

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