Lawmakers accuse UK PM Starmer of ‘colonial mindset’ in slavery reparations debate

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British Prime Minister Keir Starmer attends a press conference during the Commonwealth Heads of Government Meeting in Samoa. Picture date: Saturday October 26, 2024. Stefan Rousseau/Pool via REUTERS/File Photo

British Prime Minister Keir Starmer says discussions about reparations should not be “about money”.

PHOTO: REUTERS

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LONDON – Some British Labour lawmakers on Oct 27 accused Prime Minister Keir Starmer of having a “colonial mindset” and trying to silence nations pushing for discussions on reparations for transatlantic slavery at the Commonwealth summit in Samoa.

Britain has so far

rejected calls for reparations

, but some campaigners hoped Mr Starmer’s new Labour government would be more open to it.

However, ahead of the Commonwealth heads of government summit in Samoa, where Caribbean and African nations wished to discuss the topic, Mr Starmer said the issue was not on the agenda, and that he would like to “look forward” rather than have “very long, endless discussions about reparations on the past”.

“(It) is very insulting (to) tell people of African descent to forget and move forward,” said Labour lawmaker Bell Ribeiro-Addy at a cross-party reparations conference in London.

At the end of the Samoa summit, leaders of the 56-nation club headed by Britain’s King Charles agreed to include in their final communique that the time has come

for a discussion on reparations

.

“I’m very proud those nations refused to be silenced,” Ms Ribeiro-Addy said.

Another Labour lawmaker, Mr Clive Lewis, said it was surprising that Mr Starmer thought he could take a “colonial mindset” to the summit and “dictate what could and could not be discussed”.

At a news conference in Samoa on Oct 26, Mr Starmer said slavery was “abhorrent”, and that the discussions agreed to in the communique would not be “about money”.

A Downing Street spokesman had no further comment on the remarks by Labour lawmakers on Oct 27.

Proponents of reparations say slavery’s legacy has caused persistent racial inequalities, while opponents say countries should not be held responsible for historical wrongs.

The lawmakers said reparations could include a formal apology, debt cancellation, the return of artefacts or changing the school curriculum,

not just financial payments

.

Ms Diane Abbott, Britain’s first black woman lawmaker, said Labour previously had plans to establish a national reparations commission, but Mr Starmer “seems to have forgotten that”.

“Reparations isn’t about the past. It is about the here and now,” she said. REUTERS

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