
Audio By Carbonatix
President John Dramani Mahama has underscored the significance of a proposed United Nations resolution on slavery.
He described it as a vital step towards healing and reparative justice for millions of affected people worldwide.
Speaking during deliberations at the UN headquarters, President Mahama said the resolution, which seeks to declare the trafficking and enslavement of Africans as one of the gravest crimes against humanity, offers the global community an opportunity to acknowledge the immense suffering endured over centuries.
According to him, when asked to explain “the importance of the resolution declaring the trafficking and racialised chattel enslavement of Africans as the gravest crime against humanity,” he responded without hesitation, stating that the resolution would enable the world to collectively bear witness to the plight of an estimated 18 million men, women and children whose lives, identities and futures were taken during the transatlantic slave trade.
"This resolution allows us, as a global community, to collectively bear witness to the plight of the 18 million men, women, and children whose homes, communities, names, families, hopes, dreams, futures, and lives were stolen from them over the course of four centuries," he said on Tuesday, March 24.
According to him, the resolution goes beyond historical recognition, serving as a unifying call for solidarity across Africa, the Caribbean, Latin America and the wider diaspora.
- Read also: President Mahama urges leaders to ‘speak truth to power’ ahead of UN slavery resolution vote
He added that it would also act as a safeguard against historical amnesia, ensuring that the atrocities of slavery are neither forgotten nor repeated.
"I speak these words today not only for Ghana, but also in solidarity with the rest of Africa, the Caribbean, Latin America, the wider Diaspora and, indeed, all people of good conscience throughout the world. This resolution is a pathway to healing and reparative justice. This resolution is a safeguard against forgetting."
Mr Mahama stressed that adopting the resolution would mark a meaningful step towards restoring dignity and advancing justice for descendants and nations affected by the legacy of slavery.
Latest Stories
-
Keep the money in Ghana – Gov’t enforces local cargo insurance
50 minutes -
US Army veteran charged with leaking classified information to journalist
1 hour -
Dr. Dre joins Forbes billionaires list as second-richest hip-hop artist with $1 billion fortune
1 hour -
Trump administration cannot nix legal status of 5,000 Ethiopians, US judge rules
1 hour -
Libya announces new oil and gas discoveries with three major energy companies
1 hour -
Oil rises as investors remain wary US-Iran ceasefire will open supply flow
2 hours -
Police arrest suspect over church threat video
4 hours -
Eight appear in court as police intensify crackdown on illicit drugs in Tamale
4 hours -
Motorist remanded in custody for hitting four-year-old girl
4 hours -
Mobile money vendor robbed at Ziope
4 hours -
Benin’s Finance Minister Wadagni seeks his own mandate in election
4 hours -
GNFS retrieves body of unidentified man from Asylum Down drain
4 hours -
CAF’s Motsepe to visit both Senegal and Morocco amid AFCON fallout
5 hours -
Edmond Boateng takes up secretary role at Honorary Consular Corps of Ghana
5 hours -
Armed men kill 20 and abduct others in northwestern Nigeria villages
5 hours