A/HRC/60/77
commissions had been set up across the United States. He advocated for reparations as a
community-first project and for the creation of a United Nations tribunal for reparatory
justice.
77.
Vice Dean and the Radice Family Professor of Law at Cornell Law School, Chantal
Thomas, argued that the legal objections to the provision of reparations conveyed by some
actors were misinformed. She highlighted that international law sources supported the right
to reparations and that recent scholarship had quantified the harm of chattel enslavement.
78.
Director of the Diaspora Division of the African Union, Angela Odai, stated that the
African Union recognized the principle of representation as fundamental in achieving
reparatory justice. She stressed the need for a legal framework and for engaging with various
stakeholders, including perpetrators, in the pursuit of reparatory justice.
79.
Descendant of enslavers in the British Caribbean, journalist and philanthropist, Laura
Trevelyan, spoke about the apology made by her family and about providing 100,000 pounds
sterling in funding for education in Grenada. She underscored the selective amnesia that
existed in the United Kingdom of Great Britain and Northern Ireland regarding its role in
enslavement and the payment of compensation to enslavers, not to enslaved persons, after
abolition.
80.
Mr. Nti Asare framed reparatory justice as a global commons that benefited all,
emphasizing the need for broad alliances while ensuring that marginalized voices were
central in the debate on reparatory justice.
81.
Chair of the International Civil Society Working Group for the Permanent Forum on
People of African Descent, Amara Enyia, discussed anti-Blackness as a global phenomenon
that affected advocacy. She stressed the need to understand perpetrators and the systemic
nature of the crimes and to advocate for the adoption of legal frameworks. She warned against
State capture, where State interests superseded those of the people, and highlighted the
critical healing role of reparations.
82.
Participants discussed the need to keep the racism agenda alive in Geneva; the
unrepresented status of the people of Bonaire under Dutch rule; and the need for partnerships
between Governments and civil society, and between the Caribbean and Africa.
83.
In conclusion, Mr. Hansford referred to the concept of “interest convergence” as a
strategic framework to develop alliances where the interests of those in power aligned with
the pursuit of racial justice. Ms. Thomas emphasized the role of lawyers in securing the legal
framework and exploring connections between different forms of reparations. Ms. Odai
stressed the need for innovative funding models and monitoring mechanisms. Ms. Trevelyan
pointed to the growing momentum of discussions for reparatory justice in the United
Kingdom and highlighted the CARICOM 10-Point Reparation Plan as a model. Mr. Nti Asare
highlighted the importance of aligning offerings with incentives for partners and of providing
clear toolkits for local governments. Ms. Enyia emphasized the need to tailor interventions
to create a new world order based on the philosophical underpinnings of equality and on the
willingness of allies to step out of their comfort zones.
84.
The thirty-fifth session included a special event on the theme “Durban memoirs” to
highlight the significance of the Durban Declaration and Programme of Action, as the most
comprehensive and visionary framework against racism and the contemporary anti-racism
architecture. The event was convened by the Permanent Mission of Jamaica to the
United Nations and chaired by Ms. Reynolds.
85.
Ambassador and Permanent Representative of Jamaica to the United Nations, Brian
Christopher Manley Wallace, conveyed that the multilateral environment had changed since
the adoption of the Durban Declaration and Programme of Action and that, as State
representatives, they must adapt. He noted that the first International Decade for People of
African Descent had not achieved its goals and that much remained to be done. He explained
that the approach towards the Second International Decade should be practical, strategic and
focused on what was possible and achievable. Mr. Wallace thanked the Working Group for
the targeted focus on reparatory justice for people of African descent, for which Jamaica
strongly advocated. He recalled the Durban Declaration and Programme of Action as the
cornerstone of the global anti-racism efforts in the twenty-first century. He recommended
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