They urged greater collaboration between governments, civil society and regional organizations to create a system that would compensate Africa and the African diaspora for the enduring legacies of colonialism, enslavement, apartheid and genocide between the 16th and 19th centuries.
âAfrica was under siege,â said Hilary Brown, speaking on behalf of the Caribbean Community (CARICOM) about the 300 years of enslavement and exploitation on the continent. âHer political, economic and social systems thrown into chaotic instability as Europe plundered the continent for her most valuable asset, her people.â
Partnership and justice
She highlighted the strengthened partnership between CARICOM and the African Union (AU) whose 2025 theme is âJustice for Africans and the People of African Descent through reparations.â
âWith a strengthened partnership with the AU, the global reparations movement is at a defining moment and inflection point marked by a united global Africa finally coming together to speak with one voice on seeking justice for Africans and people of African descent.â
Ms. Brown called for a âclear, diplomatic and advocacy strategy to advance the agenda through joint action in the United Nations, the Commonwealth, and other intergovernmental bodiesâ, and a high-level forum on reparatory justice.
She also highlighted the need âto negotiate with all the entities that benefitted from African enslavement:Â the governments, the universities, the Church, the private sector.â
Representing the African Union Commission on the panel, Angela Naa Afoley Odai, said the 55-member AU bloc wants âa collective approach towards seeking regress.â
In 2025, delegates at a reparations summit in Ghana agreed to create a Global Reparations Fund, which would be based on the African continent. Few other details have yet been decided.
Civil society critical
Todayâs conversation also shifted attention to the importance of civil society in the fight for reparations.
Nkechi Taifa, director of the United States-based Reparation Education Project, said it was ânot governments but the unstoppable fire of the people that ignited the global movement for reparations.â
Referencing civil society leaders such as the late âQueen Motherâ Audely Moore and Marcus Garvey, Ms. Taifa spoke enthusiastically about the diasporaâs grassroots fight for justice, characterizing Africaâs children as “displaced, but never disconnectedâ.
She noted that the fourth Permanent Forum on People of African Descent, which started on Monday and will continue through Thursday at UN Headquarters, âmust and can continue to be a space where civil society and Government meet as equals helping to shape, not shadow, global reparations agendas.â
United Nations support
The discussion was moderated by Permanent Forum member June Soomer, who called reparatory justice a âcritical and urgent global priorityâ, with a welcome from the current Chairman of the Permanent Forum, Martin Kimani.
The United Nations has acknowledged that slavery and the transatlantic slave trade were crimes against humanity and has called for remedial action.
In remarks prepared for him at the opening of the Permanent Forum, Secretary-General AntĂłnio Guterres said the international community must strive for âreparatory justice frameworks grounded in international human rights law, developed with the inclusive and meaningful participation of affected communitiesâ that redress past wrongdoing and acknowledge not just past harms but ongoing injustices resulting from racism.
âRemedial actionsâ are also mentioned in the Durban Declaration and Programme of Action which was adopted by Member States at the World Conference Against Racism, Racial Discrimination, Xenophobia and Related Intolerance (WCAR), held by the United Nations, in Durban, South Africa, in 2001.