Land For Slaves' Descendants
France's Justice Minister, Christiane Taubira |
Published on Monday, 13 May 2013 04:26
Written by By Joseph BAMAT - France 24
Justice Minister Christiane TaubiraFrance’s
justice minister has said she supports land reform in the country’s overseas
territories to help the descendants of slaves, two days after President
Hollande declared reparations for slavery impossible.
Justice Minister Christiane Taubiracalled on the French
government to consider ways to redistribute land in its Caribbean overseas
territories to favour the descendants of slaves, just two days after President
FranƧois Hollande ruled out reparations for
France’s role in the colonial-era slave trade.
“In the overseas territories
there was a land grab, the general result was that the descendants of slaves
were left without access to land. Therefore we should think about – without
sparking a civil war – regrouping properties that were divided and about land
reform,” Taubira said in an interview published in the Journal de Dimanche weekly on Sunday.
“There are steps that should be
taken, without expropriations, and clearly explaining the reason behind the
state’s push to purchase land,” Taubira added.
Vocal supporter
As a French MP representing her
native French Guiana in 2001, Taubira authored a law that recognises slavery as
a crime against humanity. More recently, as France’s justice minister, she was
a vocal supporter of an approved bill legalising same-sex marriage.
Hollande’s unequivocal
statement on Friday that France would not pay reparations for slavery sparked
outrage among some groups.
The Representative Council of
Black Associations (CRAN),
a leading French racism watchdog group, promptly said it would sue the
state-owned bank CDC,
accusing the institution of collecting billions of euros from Haiti as part of
France’s dark legacy in slavery.
Call welcomed
But on Sunday the CRAN welcomed
Taubira’s announcement, saying land reform was another important way France
could atone for its past mistakes.
“I am overjoyed to hear of Mrs.
Taubira’s announcement,” CRAN president Luis-Georges Tin told FRANCE 24. “It’s
clear that Mr. Hollande is an uncomfortable position. He is coming off as a man
who turns people away, who tells the victims of slavery ‘too bad’.”
Tin said that the kind of land
reform his group has championed – and that Taubira has espoused – would not
lead to expropriations, claiming the state owned many tracts of unused land in
the overseas territories.
“Our colleagues overseas have
heard the announcement loud and clear… we all expect to be contacted quickly by
Mrs. Taubira and the government to figure out how to put this policy in place,”
Tin noted, adding that the new announcement would in no way dissuade his group
from suing the CDC.
(Article from CARICOM News Network)
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