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JAM | Jan 28, 2026

Ghana’s foreign affairs minister says country will demand reparations

/ Our Today

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Minister of Foreign Affairs of the Republic of Ghana Samuel Okudzeto Ablakwa (centre), dances with the Charles Town Maroon group during a welcome reception and tour at the Seville Great House in St Ann, on Sunday, January 25, 2026. Observing in the background is Jamaica’s Minister of Foreign Affairs and Foreign Trade Senator Kamina Johnson Smith. (Photo: Contributed via JIS)

The Republic of Ghana’s Minister of Foreign Affairs Samuel Okudzeto Ablakwa says Ghana will demand reparations, emphasising that the call is rooted in justice, healing and closure rather than financial compensation.

He was speaking Sunday during a welcome reception and tour at the Seville Great House in St Ann, which formed part of a visit to the island by a Ghanaian delegation, headed by the Foreign Affairs Minister and comprising other officials from that country.

Ablakwa said the demand for reparations is closely linked to the violent stripping away of African identity during enslavement, noting that Africans were forcibly renamed and disconnected from their cultural and ancestral roots.

“Our identity was deliberately and consciously, violently taken away from us. Every African arriving here was given names that did not belong to us, and that had really no meaning,” he underscored.

The minister stressed that the reparations movement is not driven by financial considerations, pointing instead to the need for justice, healing and closure for the atrocities committed against African people.

“We are doing this not because we want money, but we are seeking justice. We are seeking healing. We are seeking closure,” Ablakwa said. 

The minister explained that Ghana, working in partnership with Jamaica, CARICOM and the African Union, is advancing a Resolution at the United Nations to have the transatlantic slave trade declared the greatest crime against humanity.

“When it is presented on the 25th of March, that consequential and defining day, nobody can contest the facts contained in that resolution,” he said.

Ablakwa also rejected narratives that seek to distort history by suggesting African complicity in the transatlantic slave trade, insisting that resistance was constant both on the African continent and in the Caribbean.

“This evening, we have been reminded once again that it is a big, fat lie and that there was always resistance. Resistance by our people right in the motherland and resistance here at this crucial transit point,” he stated.

Ablakwa noted that African and Caribbean leaders have agreed that the pursuit of reparations should not be confined to a short timeframe but treated as a sustained priority.

“They have declared it an agenda for the decade,” Ablakwa said.

The minister also underscored the enduring bond between Africa and its diaspora, noting that geographic separation has not broken shared identity or purpose. “The oceans cannot separate us,” he said.

Ablakwa expressed confidence that the struggle for reparatory justice will ultimately succeed, despite the challenges involved. “No matter how long this battle takes, we shall succeed,” he declared.

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