Audio By Carbonatix
President John Mahama has rebuked racist language used against African countries, declaring that the continent and its people no longer have the luxury of silence or forgetting when described with words such as “garbage,” “filth,” and “shitholes.”
Speaking at the opening of the Diaspora Summit 2025 on December 19, President Mahama said Africa had reached a critical point in its historical journey.
He warned against attempts to erase memory and downplay the sacrifices that secured freedom for Black people across the world.
“We are the place in our journey where we do not have the luxury of forgetting when government officials can so easily use words like garbage and filth to describe our kith and kin, when they can refer to our countries as shitholes,” he said.
He said such language was not accidental and should not be excused or explained away.
According to him, the same mindset fuels the stripping of citizenship from people of African descent and the daily use of racist and divisive rhetoric.
“We do not have the luxury of forgetting or of either excusing the racist dog whistles or explaining the overtly discriminatory and divisive statements that are made daily to our hearing,” President Mahama stated.
He said the moment called for action, not retreat, and urged Africa and the diaspora to reclaim what had been lost over centuries of injustice. He said the time had come to speak clearly about loss and about what must be restored.
President Mahama recalled that at the United Nations General Assembly earlier this year, Ghana served notice of its intention to act. He announced that Ghana would move a motion next year to recognise the transatlantic slave trade as the greatest crime against humanity.
“I served notice that Ghana will move a motion next year to recognise the transatlantic slave trade as the greatest crime against humanity,” he said.
He expressed confidence that the motion would receive strong backing from Africa and the diaspora.
He said the continent had endured slavery, colonialism, genocide and apartheid, and deserved formal acknowledgement of these crimes.
President Mahama said reparative justice must go beyond symbolism.
He said reparations should include debt cancellation, monetary compensation, the return of stolen artefacts, institutional reform and changes to the global economic system. He added that Africa’s losses were not only material but emotional.
He also highlighted the lasting trauma of historical injustice, pointing to scientific studies that show trauma can be passed down across generations.
He said the accumulated trauma of the past and present raised serious questions about the health of African people and their children.
President Mahama said healing required honesty, unity and purpose. He reminded the gathering that Africa’s future could not be delayed or denied.
“And as I said at the UN, let me say it louder one more time for those in the back, the future is African,” he declared.
He said Africans and the diaspora held the power to change their circumstances, but must be more intentional about unity. He said the strength of the gathering itself showed that unity was already growing.
“And with a United Africa and diaspora, there is nothing we cannot achieve,” President Mahama said.
Latest Stories
-
Miss Health Organisation unveils new Miss Health Africa and Ghana queens
4 minutes -
Andy Dosty set to headline inaugural Ghana Independence Day celebrations in Europe
5 minutes -
GoldBod rejects IMF claims of $214m losses under gold-for-reserves programme
16 minutes -
Some MMDCEs reject uniform 24-Hour Economy Market model, seek flexible options
21 minutes -
Government to reform cultural, creative sector policies
24 minutes -
Illegal farming ravages Chai River forest reserve
30 minutes -
Christmas should inspire unity and national renewal – Prof Opoku-Agyemang
33 minutes -
Ashanti Region: NADMO prioritises preventive measures to reduce road carnage
39 minutes -
Mahama pledges reset, growth and jobs for all Ghanaians in Christmas message
47 minutes -
13 inmates at Nsawam Prison granted bail under the Justice For All Programme
53 minutes -
We invited a man into our home at Christmas and he stayed with us for 45 years
1 hour -
From uncertainty to clarity: Ghana draws the line on digital assets
1 hour -
23% of Ghanaians battling Insufficient Food Consumption – AGRA Report
1 hour -
Average price of food commodities drops by 32% over last one year – AGRA Food Security Monitor Report
2 hours -
Stampede claims life at Asake concert in Kenya
2 hours
