Audio By Carbonatix
The Pan African Lawyers Union (PALU) has warned that any country choosing to abstain or vote against Ghana’s proposed UN resolution on the transatlantic trafficking and enslavement of Africans risks being judged harshly by history.
The resolution, championed by John Dramani Mahama, seeks to formally recognise the atrocity as the gravest crime against humanity.
In a strongly worded statement dated March 18, 2026, PALU argued that the transatlantic slave trade was not an isolated historical event but a “foundational rupture” that reshaped global systems.
According to the organisation, the scale, duration, and systemic nature of racialised chattel enslavement set it apart as an “absolute crime” with consequences still felt across generations.
“We affirm that the trafficking and racialized chattel enslavement of Africans was not merely an isolated crime, but a foundational rupture that reshaped the world for all peoples,” the statement emphasised.
“It generated the wealth that fueled the rise of the current global infrastructure and fundamentally transformed political, legal, and economic systems.”
PALU stressed that recognising the atrocity at the United Nations would not be about ranking crimes but rather about articulating historical truth.
It added that such recognition is essential for justice, accountability, and reconciliation, particularly given the continued socio-economic and cultural impacts on African and diaspora communities.
“For these reasons, an abstention or vote against this resolution would place our continent, and the broader international community on the wrong side of history,” PALU cautioned.
“The adoption of this resolution is not only a moral and historical imperative, but also an opportunity to foster healing and build genuine global solidarity.”
Latest Stories
-
Producer price inflation stood at 1.4% in February 2026
4 hours -
NPLs remain key risk to banking industry – BoG
4 hours -
Consumer confidence, business sentiments improve – BoG
4 hours -
BoG assures cedi stability despite Middle East crisis
5 hours -
Sony removes 135,000 ‘deepfakes’ of its artists’ music
5 hours -
Winston Yeboah Danso supports Fafali Girls with GH₵10,000 donation ahead of Street Child World Cup
5 hours -
Oil nears $110 a barrel after gas field strike
5 hours -
Ghana’s economy now resilient enough to withstand external shocks – Mahama
5 hours -
Cocoa price adjustment painful but necessary to sustain sector – COCOBOD CEO
6 hours -
No single African country will be treated in a manner that is preferential or advantageous – Patrice Motsepe
6 hours -
Removal of GH₵1 levy won’t automatically lower pump prices – Arko Nokoe
6 hours -
Decision to strip Senegal of AFCON title reflects independence of institutions – CAF President
6 hours -
Energy Committee Vice Chair assures Ghanaians on stability amid fuel prices
7 hours -
Mahama hails 48 Engineer Regiment after successful disaster recovery mission in Jamaica
7 hours -
Rising crude prices expose flaws in ‘One Ghana Cedi’ levy – NPP MP
7 hours
