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FM
Former Member

Afro-Guyanese deserve 15,000 square miles of territory as partial compensation for enslavement; law being drafted for African land rights

 

Chairman of the Guyana Reparations Committee, Eric Phillips and Retired Rear Admiral, Gary Best.

The Guyana Reparations Committee is drafting legislation to allow Afro-Guyanese to secure a percentage of Guyana’s territory as compensation for slavery in the same way that Amerindians have been legally guaranteed land rights, a move Retired Rear Admiral Gary Best supports.

“I believe that unless the State acknowledges its responsibility, we’ll only be looking towards the external reparations which is financial reparations but within the country itself, I think Guyana owes its own people to allocate a portion of land both onshore and offshore reparatory justice to the people of Guyana,” Best said.

The issue was discussed at the University of Guyana’s 6th Conversation on Law and Society that was held on Monday  under the theme “The Challenges of and to Reparations for People of African Decent in the 21st Century.”

Best, an Attorney-at-Law, is drafting legislation for the Committee which is part of a Caribbean Community (Caricom) Reparations Commission that continues to lobby Britain to compensate countries in the region for slavery.

The former Guyana Defence Force (GDF) Chief-of-Staff argued that the State of Guyana has a duty to grant some form of reparation to descendants of African slaves by setting aside 18 percent or 15,000 square miles of Guyana’s territory.

“As a successor State, we owe a responsibility to correct those historical wrongs so I believe the Government of Guyana, more particularly the State of Guyana, owe the people of Guyana land as compensation for reparatory justice,” Best said, adding that his recommendation was linked to recommendations by the 1948 Commission of Inquiry into the social conditions of then British Guiana by British Professor Dr. J. A. Venn.

A section of the attendees at the University of Guyana’s 6th Conversation on Law and Society that was held on Monday  under the theme “The Challenges of and to Reparations for People of African Decent in the 21st Century.”

He argued that the State of Guyana has a duty to provide partial reparations as partial restorative justice based on three specific occasions: Africans were kidnapped and illegally transported to this part of the world from their lands, they indigenised the lands for more than 200 years but they were not handed to them, and only Amerindians received reparatory  justice at the time of Guyana’s independence in 1966 through the provision of lands to Amerindians, and when Guyana became a republic in 1970 no lands were again provided to African descendants.

“I do believe that the State owes a responsibility to the people of this country because it was always the State that committed the crime and prior to the Guyana State it was the British State and it was the British State that committed those heinous crimes,” he said. Best bolstered his argument by saying that enslaved Africans had humanised the coastline, created the nation state, developed the modern state and provided safe haven for all other ethnic groups to come to Guyana.  He said unless the State acknowledges its responsibility, Guyana would be merely seeking financial compensation from Britain.

Chairman of the Guyana Reparations Committee, Dr. Eric Phillips added that the land claim is documented in a book titled “Guyana Reparations Story”. Phillips announced that Rear Admiral Best was drafting an Ancestral Rights Bill.

Best told Demerara Waves Online News  on Wednesday that he expects the draft to be completed by year-end after which it would be presented to government and eventually the National Assembly for bipartisan consideration. “It is aimed at reducing inequalities and part of the healing process,” he said.

He restated that the committee would lay its claim before the President of Guyana, Cabinet and Parliament. He said Guyana’s Amerindian Act is the first reparatory justice Act in the Caribbean because it provides the nine Amerindian tribes 13.8 percent of  Guyana’s territory. “That’s what it is regardless of what you call it or don’t want to call it and the reason why Africans in Guyana have a claim to reparatory justice in Guyana is because three of those nine tribes came to Guyana a hundred to two hundred years after captive Africans were brought here so if they were given reparations, why shouldn’t we,” he said.

At the same time, Phillips said among the hurdles to reparations are questions about the legality of demands, disunity, calls for forgiveness by the church and the media,  huge unrealistic financial demands and views by other ethnic groups that Africans do not deserve reparations although 473,000 lives were lost in building Guyana.

“Justice is justice but it seems to be an issue whenever people of African descent seek justice. Oh Africans want affirmative action, never mind that those who are complaining that we want affirmative action have received affirmative action on the backs  and deaths of blood and tears of Africans who built Guyana,” said Phillips who is an executive member of the African Cultural and Development Association.

The Caribbean’s demand of 7.5 trillion pounds sterling, he said, was not too large to be paid because Britain and other European countries could pay the region 1 percent of their Gross Domestic Product  each year for 400 years. “It will never be too large to pay”, he said.

Phillips said there was need for public education and awareness to hammer home the point that reparatory justice is necessary and just. Saying that an expression of regret by European countries was insufficient.

Replies sorted oldest to newest

If any land is given it should come with conditions, maybe  it’s use should be for farming and it should be monitored.

However, what about the other ethnic groups? The Indians can argue that they deserve land due to Indenturship.  The other races can also have valid arguments.  This sounds like opening a can of worms.

alena06

Guyana has land for everyone. 

If anyone should get reparations from the government it is the Amerindians.

Blacks should seek reparations from the Europeans, not the Guyana government. 

This is indeed opening a can of worms. 

V

This is such fallacious crock. I read this again and cant figure how they came up with 18% or 15000 sq miles of land. 

Phillips is basing this on the Venn Commission Report and a book on reparations he supposedly wrote?

Guyana and CARICOM needs to take this case to Europe and seek reparatory justice from dem people, not demand from the Guyanese State to legitimize any form of forceful land grabbing.

Guyana's patrimony belongs to ALL Guyanese.

 

V

I agree. If you study African history, they have been shortchanged all their lives. (Ray, I under that the British enslaved them, but they went to Guyana, not England). Give them their entitlement. God's earth is plentiful for Coolie and Black. My fellow coolies who disagree, please don't be covetous on this one, too. 

FM
cain posted:

I feel like I should get in line fi lil bit reparation, Iman could put dah land to some good good use yeh.

Just imagine all that tropical weather and watching your erbs flourish. Good quality erbs man!

FM
Prince posted:

I agree. If you study African history, they have been shortchanged all their lives. (Ray, I under that the British enslaved them, but they went to Guyana, not England). Give them their entitlement. God's earth is plentiful for Coolie and Black. My fellow coolies who disagree, please don't be covetous on this one, too. 

Can you enlighten us who shortchanged the Africans? If you are talking about Africans, why not let them go back to Africa and ask the chiefs who sold them into slavery for compensation? 

 

FM
Last edited by Former Member
skeldon_man posted:
cain posted:

I feel like I should get in line fi lil bit reparation, Iman could put dah land to some good good use yeh.

Just imagine all that tropical weather and watching your erbs flourish. Good quality erbs man!

I should hook up with our former police chief Fantino who is now in the 'erb business to get some pointers. Imagine the banna bustin people and now runs a business doin the same thing.

cain
cain posted:
skeldon_man posted:
cain posted:

I feel like I should get in line fi lil bit reparation, Iman could put dah land to some good good use yeh.

Just imagine all that tropical weather and watching your erbs flourish. Good quality erbs man!

I should hook up with our former police chief Fantino who is now in the 'erb business to get some pointers. Imagine the banna bustin people and now runs a business doin the same thing.

He's laughin' all the way to the bank. You can say that the man was always in the erb business. You are too straight, he would not want to do business with you. He wants people like Princess Pusswah dem.

FM
Last edited by Former Member

Africans sold Africans. Those sold, were enslaved to the African overlords as captives-perhaps inferior in comparison to their captors in the art of war.

Suh, why dey want the Amerindian lands. Shouldn't they be going after African governments?

They bought old plantations at the period of emancipation and after so many decades they have not utilized it fully. 

S
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