BBHAGSIA President Presentation to the 1st Africa Diaspora Summit, Nairobi Kenya

On December 9, 2020, the Balanta B’urassa History and Genealogy Society President Siphiwe Baleka made a presentation entitled The Lineage Restoration Movement and the Future of Africa to the Plenary Session on Economic Emancipation and the Black Lives Matter Movement at the 1st African Diaspora Summit in Nairobi, Kenya organized by The Africa Diaspora Alliance and the Kenya Diaspora Alliance. The Keynote address was given by H.E. Amb. (Dr.) Arikana Chihombori-Quao.

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The Lineage Restoration Movement and the Future of Africa

 

“Since the 22 million of us were originally Africans, who are now in America, not by choice but only by a cruel accident in our history, we strongly believe that African problems are our problems and our problems are African problems. . . . The American Government is either unable or unwilling to protect the lives and property of your 22 million African-American brothers and sisters. We stand defenseless, at the mercy of American racists who murder us at will for no reason other than we are black and of African descent. . . . We have lived for over three hundred years in that American den of racist wolves in constant fear of losing life and limb. Recently, three students from Kenya were mistaken for American Negroes and were brutally beaten by the New York police. . . . Our problems are your problems. . . . Your problems will never be fully solved until and unless ours are solved. You will never be fully respected until and unless we are also respected. You will never be recognized as free human beings until and unless we are also recognized and treated as human beings.”

  – Malcolm X, Memo to the Organization of African Unity (OAU), 1964

These are extremely strong words from brother Malcolm. Perhaps my words today may be equally as strong.

It is a great honor to be asked to present a paper to the 1st Africa Diaspora Symposium and 7th Edition of the Kenya Diaspora Homecoming Convention. I have been to many places in Africa, but never to the beautiful Mt. Kilimanjaro and the land of the beautiful Kikuyu, Luo, Jaramogi and other peoples as well as the brave Mau Mau. I hope someday to correct this.

My first visit to East Africa was Ethiopia. On February 3-4, 2003, the 1st Extraordinary Summit of the Assembly of the African Union in Addis Ababa adopted the historic Article 3(q) that officially “invite(s) and encourage(s) the full participation of Africans in the Diaspora in the building of the African Union in its capacity as an important part of our Continent”. I was the only member of the Diaspora from the United States present at that historic moment. I felt an incredible sense of pride and duty, as Malcolm must have felt, when I, like him, served as the bridge reaching across the Atlantic to connect the two African peoples separated by the criminal European Trans-Atlantic Trafficking of People with African Lineage and Heritage.

Malcolm X visited Kenya in 1959 and developed a friendship with Pio Gama Pinto. Together, they planned a common strategy to deal with the daily humiliations and indignities suffered by both Africans and African Americans. When Malcolm returned from the OAU in 1964, he created the Organization of Afro American Unity (OAAU) to organize the African American people for the next phase of their liberation struggle. As part of that plan, Malcolm X wanted African Nations to support his petition to the United Nations charging the United States government with genocide. On February 21, 1965, the day Malcolm X was to explain this strategy of the OAAU, Malcom was assassinated. Three days later, Pinto, a strong supporter of Malcolm’s genocide petition against the United States at the UN, was also assassinated. Truly, Malcolm X’s words came to pass: “Our problems are your problems. . . . Your problems will never be fully solved until and unless ours are solved.”

I have begun this presentation with the story of Malcolm X and Pio Gama Pinto to place the topic of the Diaspora participation in the African Union in its historical context and to highlight the close connection of the liberation struggles of Kenyans and African Americans.

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When Ethiopian Emperor Haile Selassie made his first visit to the United States in 1954, the first ever visit of an African Emperor to the United States, the Chicago Defender newspaper reported on this seminal event with the headline, “Emperor Selassie Links Negro With Africans Throughout World.”

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Just days before, however, the British launched Operation Anvil. 40,000 British troops captured 26,500 “suspects” and held them in concentration camps.  Pictures of Field Marshall General Musa Mwariama inspired many people across the Atlantic to start growing dreadlocks. The Mau Mau inspired the liberation struggle of Africans in America, and many members of the Black Liberation Army took Swahili names. The Mau Mau and the Kenyan people succeeded in overthrowing their colonial masters. African American people, were not successful in overthrowing theirs and achieving national independence. Our liberation movement was crushed by the United States government. Our leaders, like Malcolm X, Martin Luther King Jr., Fred Hampton and many others, were targeted by the FBI, assassinated, and our formations, like the Revolutionary Action Movement, the Republic of New Afrika, the Black Panther Party, and many other “suspects” like the Mau Mau, were targeted, surveilled, imprisoned and destroyed.

You may forgive me for making such a point, but the theme of this workshop is “Economic Emancipation and the Black Lives Matter Moment.” Therefore, we can not talk about Economic Emancipation without talking about what this Black Lives Matter Moment is. And this Black Lives Matter Moment didn’t start with the police murders of Sean Bell in 2006, Kimani Gray in 2013, Eric Garner, Michael Brown and Tamir Rice in 2014, Sandra Bland in 2015, Alton Sterling and Philando Castile in 2016, Chinedu Okobi in 2018, Breonna Taylor in 2020, or my cousin, Jacob Blake, a descendant of the Balanta people of Guinea Bissau, who miraculously survived seven bullets in his back from white police officers in Kenosha, WI in August, 2020. The Black Lives Matter Moment started with the African Revolution on both sides of the Atlantic and included the Mau Mau. In America, it is the unfinished business of the liberation struggle and decolonization of the African American.

So, let us now, then, talk of economic emancipation. Upon his return from the OAU, Malcolm X said,

“One of the things I saw the OAAU doing from the very start was collecting the names of all the people of African descent who have professional skills, no matter where they are. Then we could have a central register that we could share with independent countries in Africa and elsewhere. . . . The 22,000,000 so-called Negroes should be separated completely from America and should be permitted to go back home to our African homeland which is a long-range program; so the short-range program is that we must eat while we’re still here, we must have a place to sleep, we have clothes to wear, we must have better jobs, we must have better education; so that although our long-range political philosophy is to migrate back to our African homeland, our short-range program must involve that which is necessary to enable us to live a better life while we are still here.”

Have African Americans done this? Have they lived a better life and improved their economic position since the time of Malcolm X?

The Report of the National Advisory Commission on Civil Disorders (Kerner Commission 1968) stated,

"This is our basic conclusion: Our nation is moving toward two societies, one black, one white--separate and unequal. Reaction to last summer's disorders has quickened the movement and deepened the division. Discrimination and segregation have long permeated much of American life; they now threaten the future of every American. . . . What white Americans have never fully understood but what the Negro can never forget--is that white society is deeply implicated in the ghetto. White institutions created it, white institutions maintain it, and white society condones it."

 

African Americans live in apartheid communities and this is de facto colonialism. Fifty years after the Kerner Commission Report, the Economic Policy Institute concluded that

·         African Americans today are much better educated than they were in 1968 but still lag behind whites in overall educational attainment. More than 90 percent of younger African Americans (ages 25 to 29) have graduated from high school, compared with just over half in 1968—which means they’ve nearly closed the gap with white high school graduation rates. They are also more than twice as likely to have a college degree as in 1968 but are still half as likely as young whites to have a college degree.

·         The substantial progress in educational attainment of African Americans has been accompanied by significant absolute improvements in wages, incomes, wealth, and health since 1968. But black workers still make only 82.5 cents on every dollar earned by white workers, African Americans are 2.5 times as likely to be in poverty as whites, and the median white family has almost 10 times as much wealth as the median black family.

·         7.5 percent of African Americans were unemployed in 2017, compared with 6.7 percent in 1968 — still roughly twice the white unemployment rate.

·         The rate of homeownership, one of the most important ways for working- and middle-class families to build wealth, has remained virtually unchanged for African Americans in the past 50 years.

·         Black homeownership remains just over 40 percent, trailing 30 points behind the rate for whites, who have seen modest gains during that time.

·         The share of incarcerated African Americans has nearly tripled between 1968 and 2016 — one of the largest and most depressing developments in the past 50 years, especially for black men, researchers said.

·         African Americans are 6.4 times as likely than whites to be jailed or imprisoned, compared with 5.4 times as likely in 1968.

It is now known that it will take black families in America 228 years to earn the same amount of wealth white families have today. The top 10% of African Americans hold 75% of black wealth. That means that the vast majority of black people in America – 90% - have just 25% of this much-glorified spending power of the black community. In fact, the bottom 50% of the black community is worth less than $1.

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Meanwhile, African Americans are just 2% of landowners in America, holding 7.7 million acres or just 0.9%, of all private agricultural land in the U.S. It is with chagrin and alarm, then, that I realize that the primary, even sole focus, of the African Union’s Agenda 2063 project concerning the African Diaspora, is centered around business investment. When it comes to the African American community that descended from Africans that were enslaved in the United States, the African Union is expecting this colonized landless peasantry to do what????

None of this comes as a surprise to me because I was there in Addis Ababa, Ethiopia at the African Union when they created the African Union “Sixth Region” to include the Diaspora. The Senegalese delegation proposed the amendment after it was “inadvertently omitted from the items listed on the Agenda.” They then read out the amendment to “Invite and encourage the full participation of Africans in the Diaspora in the building of the African Union in its capacity as an important part of our Continent.” The delegation of Senegal, the proposer of the amendment, informed the Meeting that the issue could be addressed from two perspectives, namely;


a) a narrow sense, whereby the Diaspora includes all Africans currently residing anywhere outside the Continent of Africa;

b) a broad and historic sense, whereby the Diaspora comprises all Africans who had left Africa by force and still consider themselves Africans."

Ever since, the primary operational definition of the diaspora has been the narrow sense, now referred to as the “contemporary” diaspora as opposed to the “historic” diaspora – i.e. those of us whose ancestors were taken against their will and brought to the America’s and enslaved. Why? Because it was the intention of the former Senegalese President Abdoulaye Wade and the African Union, to reverse the major problem of “brain drain” at the end of the 1990’s and early 2000’s. I know the details because I was doing research at the Economic Commission for Africa (ECA) and studying the “Brain Gain” proposals. These amounted to glorified working vacations for African expatriate doctors and engineers. For the same amount of money these programs were spending, they could get ten times as many members of the “historic” diaspora to come and permanently repatriate to Africa. But that was never their intention. Accordingly, at the First AU-Western Hemisphere Diaspora Forum in Washington DC, December 17-19, 2002 prior to adoption of Amendment 3(q) in Addis Ababa, it was decided that “The African Union should consider the African Diaspora as Business partners” and “Establish official programs to identify and qualify Diaspora businesses.” The African Growth & Opportunity Act should “identify and prioritize products that can be traded between Africa and Africans in the Diaspora” and “enhance opportunities for Africans in the Diaspora to provide appropriate equipment and technical services to enable African countries to meet AGOA standards.” Remember, the use of the word “diaspora” here is code for “contemporary” diaspora, meaning expatriate Africans to the Americas.

Notably, however, the Forum did make a recommendation that the AU should “include in its agenda the ‘crime against humanity’ concept and work with Diaspora organizations to suggest a process for reparations.” What has the AU done towards seeking reparations? Which European country have they brought before the International Court of Justice (ICJ) as Malcolm X and Pio Gama Pinto planned? What did Kenya do to pursue reparations when it’s grandson, Barack Obama, became the United States President?

I will spare this session a detailed recounting of what has happened since 2003. You can read my article, The Au 6th Region Diaspora Initiative Is Failing Members of the Diaspora Whose Ancestors Were Enslaved In The United States and How The African Union Was Established To Include The African Diaspora. Suffice it to say, countless business and development schemes have been created and marketed to the contemporary diaspora in the United States and Europe. Numerous forums and expos have been held which were largely attended by the contemporary diaspora of expatriate Africans in America. This is because the AU and its networks in the United States do not do outreach to the historical diaspora – let us call them Descendants of Africans Enslaved in the United States (DAEUS). DAEUS, while welcomed, is not usually specifically invited. When there is outreach, however, it is primarily to use heritage tourism as an engine for economic growth. This was the case in 2007 when Ghana launched the Joseph Project to commemorate the 200-year anniversary of Britain’s abolition of the slave trade (1807) and the 50th anniversary of Ghana’s impendence (1957). Ghana did the same in 2019, this time commemorating the 400-year anniversary of the Africans brought to the Jamestown colony in Virginia (1619). Neither program was designed to repair the long-term spiritual damage and Transgenerational Epigenetic Effect of slavery. They were designed to achieve tourism. That is not what the historic diaspora needs.

So let me finally get on with the main point then. What is Economic Emancipation and the Black Lives Matter Moment? How can Economic Emancipation be achieved now?

First, we must learn the lessons from history. “Our problems are your problems. . . . Your problems will never be fully solved until and unless ours are solved. You will never be fully respected until and unless we are also respected.” The African continent is not respected. Kenya is not respected, even though a Kenyan-European became the first black president of the United States in 2008. The general perception is that Africa continues to be a neocolonialist territory controlled by its former colonial masters and subject to new colonial overtures from China and Turkey. Civil society has roundly condemned the African Union, and hardly a black person in America even knows anything about the African Union. At best, there is only the great Pan African nostalgia for a powerful United States of Africa as envisioned by Marcus Garvey and Kwame Nkrumah but betrayed by today’s African elite.

Why are there both traditional rulers and political rulers in Africa? Why aren’t these the same? Is that not an admission that Africa is still not free? That it has two sets of “leaders”, one official and the other marginalized?

Why are we talking about “contemporary” diaspora versus the “historic” diaspora? Are we not simply Bam’faba, all descendants from the same ancestors?

We have tried this project before. Prior to the American civil war, African people in America were returning to the African continent, to Liberia and Sierra Leone. Men like Martin Delaney were talking about African economic development and planning a transcontinental railroad 170 years ago! Why did this not succeed? Why has the partnership between the African continent and the Diaspora not realized its potential? It is because such projects did not have as their aim spiritual and human repair. They were not concerned with restoring ancestral lineage. Instead, they were infected with Christian religion and missionary ideals that were not different than white Christian teachers except for the black face. Because the repatriates did not know who their ancestors were, which tribes they came from, they did not seek to restore those connections. Instead, they came as religious missionaries and the histories of Liberia and Sierra Leone reveal to us the pitfalls of this. You can not have long-term economic sustainability without first integrating into the local population. And “foreigners” can not integrate. For Africans to truly realize the benefits of a great African Renaissance, it will require undoing the “crime against humanity” that took place. And for those of us on this side of the Atlantic, that crime is the crime of Ethnocide.

Fortunately, it is now possible to reverse Ethnocide. The African Ancestry genetic test can identify a person’s maternal and paternal ancestry. 750,000 tests have already been done. We now know where we came from, who we came from. A small number of Kikuyu, Somali, Turkana and Maasai from Kenya have already been identified.  For there to be Economic Emancipation during the Black Lives Matter Moment, it will require reverse engineering the dehumanization process that enslaved African people in the Americas and colonized people on the African continent. You can not expect people still suffering from the dehumanization process to become the economic engine for Africa. So what are we talking about?

There are 47 million people of African descent in the United States. That means there are almost as many people of African descent in the United States as there are in Kenya (51 million). There are 97 million people of African descent in Brazil. Hait has 9.9 million, Colombia has 4.9 million, Venezuela has 3.7 million, Jamaica has 2.5 million, Mexico has 1.4 million, Canada has 1.2 million, the Dominican Republic has 1.1 million, Cuba has 1.1 million people, Ecuador has 1.1 million and there are more in Peru, Trinidad, Puerto Rico, Suriname, Grenada and elsewhere. The problem is the same in each and every one of these territories: The problem is IMPERIALISM AND COLONIALISM. Chairman Omali Yeshitela of the African Peoples Socialist Party states,

“All throughout Africa, we have this false national consciousness, just as we do here (in the United States).

I spoke recently at Oxford, where the question of Africa and African freedom has begun to resurface during this era of the crisis of the social system that’s based on slavery and colonialism. Everything that you see—all the wealth, all the resources—in this country and throughout Europe, stem from the enslavement of African people and the colonization of Africa and other peoples around the world. In this country, Africans still live under colonial domination, just as we do in other places. We’ve concluded that there is no way out of this just trying to fight this struggle within the U.S. Our struggle is one that is global. The imperialists understand that.

The definition of institutional racism is called colonialism every place else in the world.

Everyone else calls it colonialism, now you come up with this concept of institutional racism.

All the institutions do that to us because they're colonial institutions. We have a colonial relationship. When a foreign alien, hostile entity, captures you, your resources, controls and dominates everything: that's colonialism. It's important to say that because I don't know how to cure racism. Although people are making fortunes doing that—setting up schools, and trainings to cure your racism. When they leave those classes to cure their racism and they go home and relieve their Vietnamese, Mexican, or African baby sitter, the conditions in the white community are just as they were when they took the course, before they took the course and the conditions of the African community are still the same.

You say you're fighting against racism? How do you know when you've won? Does someone come out waving a white flag? Do you sign a peace treaty? Racism now surrenders?

No! But colonialism, you know that. That's a foreign power that dominates our lives. We've seen people fight and defeat colonialism and we can fight and defeat colonialism as well. We came to those conclusions, many of them, in the 1960s, when our revolution was defeated. I don't talk about the 60s as some kind of nostalgic waxing, to say how wonderful the 60s were. It's important to us only as a means by which we can get closer to understanding where we are now.

We didn't just drop out of the sky, into this situation in 2019. There's a process that brought us here, that's really important for us to understand. We need to understand the nature of the social system that we're dealing with. That's part of what it is we intend to do.”

We now know that Economic Emancipation cannot happen without reparations. African American economist Sandy Darrity has shown that the racial wealth gap in the United States can not be closed by pursuing any of the ten myths:

Myth 1: Greater educational attainment or more work effort on the part of blacks will close the racial wealth gap

Myth 2: The racial homeownership gap is the “driver” of the racial wealth gap

Myth 3: Buying and banking black will close the racial wealth gap

Myth 4: Black people saving more will close the racial wealth gap

Myth 5: Greater financial literacy will close the racial wealth gap

Myth 6: Entrepreneurship will close the racial wealth gap

Myth 7: Emulating successful minorities will close the racial wealth gap

Myth 8: Improved “soft skills” and “personal responsibility” will close the racial wealth gap

Myth 9: The growing numbers of black celebrities prove the racial wealth gap is closing

Myth 10: Black family disorganization is a cause of the racial wealth gap

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This is because the racial wealth gap was created by the dehumanization process that occurred in a controlled environment – i.e. state sanctioned ethnocide by the American Government. In order for the Historic Diaspora to contribute to any Economic Emancipation on the African Continent, there must be some Economic Emancipation on this side of the continent. That can only happen in a controlled environment in the United States that is conducive to reversing ethnocide and the rehumanizing process. In other words, to reverse engineer The Transgenerational Epigenetic Effects of slavery that occurred in environments that used trauma and terrorism, it is going to require controlled environments of the opposite kind: peace, security, and most importantly, autonomy, self-determination and liberty.

This can be achieved through the exercise of minority rights and self-determination under a framework of democratic pluralism in the Americas. And this is exactly what was presented to the Working Group of Experts on People of African Descent at the United Nations at their regional meeting with civil society in North America, November 23, 2020. However, such autonomous environments for African descendant peoples in the United States will not be achieved without support from African nations themselves. This Malcolm X and Pio Gama Pinto understood very well.

What can Kenya do in international forums to encourage the United States to pursue the Agenda For Black America’s Restoration and Self Determination? Will Kenya support the Afro-Descendants Confederate Nation’s request to be placed on the decolonization list at the United Nations which was made September 24, 2018 to the UN Decolonization Fourth Committee? Is it right for the African Union and its members to seek the economic support of African Americans without supporting African American civil, political, social, economic and cultural rights at the United Nations?

Meanwhile, the rehumanization process will require controlled environments on the African continent itself. The Lineage Restoration Movement is pursuing just that. This, we believe, is the key to the Economic Emancipation. DAEUS is now using genetic testing from African Ancestry to identify and restore their ancestral lineages. Those that have done this are now starting to return to the territories of their maternal and paternal ancestors.  Why is this important? Because the members of the Lineage Restoration Movement are primarily concerned with human-centered development first instead of economic development. Our members have a genuine interest in learning and preserving their indigenous language, spiritual systems and culture at the same time that many people on the African continent are willing to abandon them for European languages, religions, and cultural models. Thus, the Lineage Restoration Movement serves as a new force for African self-determination and anti-colonialism on both sides of the Atlantic.

What does this mean? Members of the Lineage Restoration Movement are pursuing authentic connections with the people who share their actual ancestry. This means going out of the city and returning to the villages where they come from. It is these villages where development most needs to happen and which continue to be ignored. Consider Ghana’s recent 2019 Year of Return event. The average Ghanaian knew nothing about what was happening because they weren’t consulted or informed beforehand. Members of the Diaspora that returned were sold the idea that returning to Ghana’s “Door of Return” was somehow a healing ritual without regard for whether or not the ancestors of those who returned actually departed from Ghana. Many of the people who returned to Ghana had no idea whether or not their ancestors were from Ghana. They were not interested in learning any of the languages or living any of the traditional culture. Many of those that came were from the class of people of looking to invest in real estate and upscale coffee shops. That is not what the vast majority of people on the African continent need or want, neither is it what DAEUS needs, either. When business investment happens before there is a solid relationship and bond between people, the potential for xenophobic conflict is great. We have seen this in Liberia and Sierra Leone in the 1800’s, and given the current division between Africans on the continent and Africans in the Diaspora, and exacerbated by the further division between the “contemporary” diaspora and “historic” diaspora, pursuing the current models of AU 6th Region economic development in Africa is not likely to lead to Economic Emancipation during the Black Lives Matter Moment. Significant segments of the Black community in America already feels that the AU initiative is disingenuous and is only trying to reach into the pockets of black Americans while not caring enough to pursue reparations. Meanwhile, current outreach programs further convince the historic diaspora that the AU 6th Region is mostly concerned with the contemporary diaspora. The irony is that the black Americans most genuinely interested in the future of Africa – those who can do the most to popularize and promote it - are the grassroots Pan Africanists and Black Nationalists who are not part of the top 10% of black wealth owners in America and who are being ignored by AU outreach efforts.

How can the situation be improved? The AU must approach the problem by asking the question, what can the AU offer the Diaspora instead of always asking, how do we get economic investment from the Diaspora? Indeed, in May, 2003, the Executive Council of the African Union met at the Third Extraordinary Session in Sun City, South Africa and issued the "Decision on the Development of the Diaspora Initiative in the African Union". The Declaration stated,

"b. What can the African Union offer the Diaspora?

Discussions during the Washington Forum also offers a picture of some of what the Diaspora may expect - a measure of credible involvement in the policy making processes, some corresponding level of representation, symbolic identification, requirements of dual or honorary citizenship of some sort, moral and political support of Diaspora initiatives in their respective regions, preferential treatment in access to African economic undertakings including consultancies, trade preferences and benefits for entrepreneurs, vis a vis non - Africans, social and political recognition as evident in invitation to Summits and important meetings etc. These deliberations must also focus on possibilities, criteria and qualification for Diaspora representation in the Economic, Cultural and Social Council (ECOSOC), the Pan-African Parliament, etc.”

Clearly, what needs to be done is well known. Since 2003, the first objective was to elect the 20 Diaspora representatives to the AU ECOSOCC. I myself, along with Dr. David Horne, were the first to pursue this, following the guidelines that were inadequately presented by the AU at the time. We began the process of organizing and hosting elections in the United States, Canada, Central and South America, and the Caribbean with communication with our colleagues in Europe. And what did the AU do? They did everything to prevent the elections. And that is why until this very day, after 17 years of struggle, the historic African Diaspora still has zero representation in ECOSOCC. Even Shem Ochuodho, a “contemporary” diasporan, took 8 years before he could be seated as Eastern Africa’s Representative to the AU ECOSOCC. So what are we, the historic diaspora, to make of the authenticity of the AU 6th Region Diaspora initiative?

If we are to effectively utilize the potential of the 175 million people of the “historic” diaspora in the Americas, it will depend on the deepening of their identification with Africa. This will be accelerated and strengthened through African Ancestry genetic testing and participation in the Lineage Restoration Movement. Programs for these people, aimed at repairing the damage of the Transgenerational Epigenetic Effect of slavery, must replace superficial heritage tourism if there is going to be any Economic Emancipation now and in the future. It would be well for Africa’s intellectuals and scientists and spiritual practitioners to study and master the Transgenerational Epigenetic Effect and for Africa’s politicians to aggressively pursue in international forums the decolonization and reparations for victims of the criminal European trans-Atlantic trafficking, enslavement and ethnocide of people with African lineage and heritage.

BBHAGSIA Winter Celebration, Sunday, December 13 at 6:00 PM CST

ngubur a mada yíndi janj awoda”

'The turtle can't have the roof on its own'

There is nothing you can do without helping each other. This means that we always need the next in life”

- Balanta Proverb

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This is a social event to celebrate the holiday and a very successful first year of BBHAGSIA operations. There is lots of recent events and news to discuss. We have many new members, there is the upcoming Naming Ceremony for nine of our members. I am traveling to Guinea Bissau from December 18 to January 10th and meeting the President, Umaro Sissoco Embalo. And we are finalizing the details for the Decade of Return Africa Day 2021. Let's all gather as one Balanta bendembah (family) at this wonderful time!

Siphiwe Baleka is inviting you to a scheduled Zoom meeting.

Topic: BBHAGSIA Winter Celebration

Time: Dec 13, 2020 06:00 PM Central Time (US and Canada)

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BBHAGSIA President Addresses the Working Group of Experts on People of African Descent at the United Nations

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Complete Statement to the 26th Session of the Working Group of Experts on People of African Descent Regional Meeting with Civil Society

November 23, 2020

 

As President of the Balanta B’urassa History & Genealogy Society in America, I submit this statement on behalf of the Lineage Restoration Movement and as a member of the UNESCO Inclusive Policy Lab Public E-Team for People of African Descent and the Sustainable Development Goals.

The criminal Trans-Atlantic Trafficking of People with African Lineage and Heritage consisted of a minimum of 36,000 voyages that are documented in Davis Eltis’ Trans-Atlantic Slate Trade Database.[1] At least 12.5 million people from the African continent were trafficked to the Americas and they and their descendants were dehumanized through a slave manufacturing process that resulted in the crime against humanity known as ethnocide.

As stated by the Dignity Rights Initiative of the American Bar Association, “the transatlantic slave trade intentionally worked to destroy the culture of African people but keep the people. European colonizers prevented African people from speaking their languages and practicing their religions, and they systematically severed African communal and familial bonds. The chattel slavery system of the Americas and its modern-day derivatives are a continuation of ethnocide.”[2] James W. Nickel adds, “Ethnocide is like genocide in being a means of getting rid of a group. Genocide involves the physical elimination of the group, whereas ethnocide could, in principle, leave all of the members of the group alive.”[3]

The ethnocide of the various peoples brought from the African continent to the North American colonies was state-sanctioned through laws such as the Negro Law of South Carolina (1740)[4], which legislated, among other things, that slaves were to be punished with up to twenty lashes on the bare back for gathering together with other slaves, buying, selling, dealing, bartering, or exchanging any goods, wares, provisions, grain or commodities, possessing a boat, canoe, horse, cattle, sheep, or hogs, beating drums, blowing horns or using any other loud instruments, having or wearing any sort of apparel “finer” or of greater value than Negro cloth, or reading or writing. Worse penalties, including death, were sanctioned for escaping from the plantation and or defending oneself from attack against a white man or woman. After the American revolution, federal laws continued this dehumanization and ethnocide.

While the economic damage to and condition of the victims of the criminal Trans-Atlantic Trafficking of people with African Lineage and Heritage has been well studied, identified, and calculated, less studied and understood is the damage to the identity resulting from ethnocide.

Identity locates an individual as a part of a family, a community, a region, a culture, and a historical period.  On the African continent identity was and still is formed by the knowledge and preservation of one’s maternal lineage, transmitted from mother to daughter and paternal lineage, transmitted from father to son. Depending on each family’s village tradition, identity, and all that it included – language, culture, spirituality, land, and one’s place in the world and universe (history), was determined either by maternal or paternal lineage. Health and well-being, therefore, required the preservation of one’s lineage. If you did not preserve your lineage, you lost your location or place in the world.

In the same way that the criminal Trans-Atlantic Trafficking of people with African Lineage and Heritage caused severe and devastating economic damage, it also created severe and devastating LINEAGE DAMAGE. The ethnocide has resulted in an identity crisis for black people in America. In addition to the identity crisis, we are now beginning to understand the genetic damage that was done.

Scientific study has definitively proven that biopsychosocial adversity affects gene structure and function through biochemical actions on the epigene and lead to pathologic function of the specialized cells of the body creating The Transgenerational Epigenetic Effect (TTEE). Kenneth S. Nave, MD states, “Science has proven that environmental conditions shape the structure and function of highly specialized cells in key areas of the body. These changes occur in an extension or appendage to the gene known as the Epigene. The Epigene is an extension of the gene that responds to biochemical signals emanating from the environment. These signals cause changes to the gene. These epigenetic changes to the gene influence and change the cellular genetics of the cell. . . . Under certain environmental conditions, the epigenome programs or ‘reprograms’ the genetics of the cells of the limbic system which, in its most fundamental definition, is the center of all human thought, emotion, behavior, learning and, when present, psychosocial pathology. . . This environmental shaping is usually pathologic leading to physical disease, social dysfunction, and mental illness. Most significantly to the plight and social conditions of the descendants of former slaves is the scientifically proven fact that the changes to the epigene created by environmental pathology is passed down to the descendants of those initially impacted by environmental gene shaping. . . . As it relates to the cells of the brain, this cellular shaping can lead to problems with learning, memory, and mental health. As it relates to cells of the heart and cardiovascular system, these changes can lead to heart attacks, strokes, and kidney failure. Endocrine cells genetic shaping can lead to diabetes and metabolic syndrome. . . . This environmental shaping of the gene is well confirmed and is also recognized to be transmissible at least to the fourth generation of one’s descendants and beyond. That means that any environmental hardship experienced by your ancestors and causing this genetic environmental shaping could possibly, and is probably, transferred down to you, their descendant, and likewise your progeny, for generations. This is The Transgenerational Epigenetic Effect.”[5]

Until recently, reversing the dehumanization process that resulted in ethnocide, and resolving the identity crisis of the victims of the criminal Trans-Atlantic Trafficking of people with African Lineage and Heritage was thought impossible. However, due to the advent of genetic testing through the company African Ancestry, it is possible to restore the ancestral lineages of the victims. More than 750,000 tests have already identified maternal and paternal lineages, creating the new Lineage Restoration Movement.[6] With restored identities, groups of people on both sides of the Atlantic who share the same ancestry are now reconnecting and  returning to their ancestral homelands. They are creating a new model of development and Diaspora relations on the African continent that prioritizes human repair and development over economic investment. This was most evident in 2019 when Foday  Conteh led a contingent of Temne and Mende descendants back to Sierra Leone  where they gained citizenship[7], and in January 2020 when I myself became the first of my family, after two hundred and fifty years, to return to my ancestral homeland in Guinea Bissau and helped launch that country’s “Decade of Return Initiative”.[8]

One important implication of restoring the ancestral lineage is that it allows the victims to better utilize the Universal Human Rights Instruments, and in particular, those pertaining to the rights of indigenous peoples and minorities. The dehumanizing slave manufacturing process took place in controlled environments that used violence and terrorism over the course of four hundred years. To reverse engineer The Transgenerational Epigenetic Effects, it is going to require controlled environments of the opposite kind: peace, security, and most importantly, autonomy, self-determination and liberty. This can be achieved through the exercise of minority rights and self-determination under a framework of democratic pluralism in the Americas.

I invite the Working Group of Experts on People of African Descent to review the document, Agenda for Black America’s Restoration and Self Determination[9], to see a vision and proposal for what this looks like in the United States.

Thank you,

Siphiwe Baleka, Founder

Balanta B'urassa History & Genealogy Society in America

Senior Heritage Ambassador, Director of Research and Development Balanta

United House of Ancestry

Regional Director, North America, African Sports Ventures Group

Member, Inclusive Policy Lab of the UNESCO E-team for the People of African Descent and the Sustainable Development Goals

Member, NCOBRA

balantasociety@gmail.com

AGENDA FOR BLACK AMERICA'S RESTORATION AND SELF DETERMINATION

[1] https://www.slavevoyages.org/

[2] https://www.americanbar.org/groups/human_rights/dignity-rights-initiative/ethnocide-project/what-is-ethnocide-/#:~:text=Ethnocide%20is%20the%20destruction%20of,Nazi%20Party%20rose%20to%20power.

[3] https://onlinelibrary.wiley.com/doi/abs/10.1111/j.1467-9833.1994.tb00350.x

[4] https://digital.scetv.org/teachingAmerhistory/pdfs/Transciptionof1740SlaveCodes.pdf

[5] Nave, Kenneth S., Competent Proof: The Legal Standing African Americans Have in the Battle for Slavery Reparations.  June 2020. www.drkennave.com

[6] https://www.balanta.org/news/lineage-restoration-movement

[7] https://youtu.be/eqjt9FODYOs

[8] https://www.balanta.org/news/report-of-the-president-of-the-balanta-burassa-history-amp-genealogy-society-in-america-mission-to-guinea-bissau

[9] http://www.siphiwebaleka.com/blog/2020/10/22/agenda-for-black-american-restoration-and-self-determination

UNESCO Inclusive Policy Lab.JPG

26th Session WGEPAD Chat Session

Excerpts:

08:31 AM

SPMHO Dominique Day : 

Please present your statement and then we can dive into the questions more deeply. We are hoping your statements address the first question or all 3

08:33 AM

Judy L. Richards : 

Greetings All! Just got in but was listening on UN TV. Honoured to be here with you all!

08:48 AM

Nyanchama Okemwa : 

excellent points! Very profound!

08:49 AM

Roger Wareham : 

When this is over will there be a list with the contact information of participants?

08:52 AM

Una Giltsoff (UNOG Moderator) : 

Roger I think you should check with the Chair

08:53 AM

SPMHO Dominique Day : 

All statements will be posted on the WGEPAD site, as well as the recording of the session. Im assuming we will also post the participant list, but I will have to confirm that.

08:53 AM

Siphiwe Baleka : 

AGENDA FOR BLACK AMERICA'S RESTORATION AND SELF DETERMINATION http://www.siphiwebaleka.com/blog/2020/10/22/agenda-for-black-american-restoration-and-self-determination

08:54 AM

08:57 AM

Cliff_Kuumba : 

My statement has been submitted to Ms. Christina Saunders. More information related to the organizations I work with can be found at https://srdcinternational.org which will be active in two days, and http://kuumbareport.com which is active now. I will submit further comments to Ms. Saunders as needed.

08:59 AM

09:00 AM

Ade Olaiya : 

Hello, I'm OK with my statement being circulated. The current and previous speakers are voicing some of the concerns I have raised.

09:00 AM

Roger Wareham : 

All these presentations have been excellent

09:00 AM

M. Dido MULUMBA : 

Merci de nous laisser écouter meme en anglais...

09:02 AM

Ade Olaiya : 

My brief also responds to the other questions.

09:03 AM

SPMHO Dominique Day : 

Here are the topics: Civil society discussion Topic A. What has been happening? What are the key human rights concerns of people of African descent in your country/region today? Have these concerns become more apparent in the last 9 months and, if so, how? In the last 5 years? In the last 20 years?

09:03 AM

SPMHO Dominique Day : 

Civil society discussion Topic B. What works? a. What have been the key achievements in realizing the three objectives of the International Decade (Recognition, Justice, and Development) for people of African descent? b. In the last five years, what examples exist of relevant legislative measures, implementation of national actions plans or policies, establishment of monitoring and complaint mechanisms, awareness raising and institutional strengthening activities, research, data collection, community engagement, or other measures or activities undertaken by Member States, national human rights institutions and equality bodies, civil society, and UN agencies, funds and programmes?

09:04 AM

SPMHO Dominique Day : 

Civil society discussion Topic C. What do you want to see prioritized in the next 5 years?

09:10 AM

Cliff_Kuumba : 

My concerns are, I think, more closely related to Question C, What do you want to see prioritized in the next 5 years. To that point, my concern about ensuring more extensive involvement of the grassroots Diaspora at OHCHR, WGEPAD and UN in general. The colonial governments have shown that they will deny the existence of racism and will resist efforts to make them address racism, and thus we will be re-hashing the crimes of the oppressors at the End Term Review. More extensive involvement of Afrikan Diaspora organizations with WGEPAD will exert pressure on the African Union which has been mired in bureaucracy as well as the oppressor countries that would prefer their misdeeds not be exposed to the world. Whoever gives full regard to the grassroots Diaspora first will be able to claim the moral high ground in the global struggle against racism.

09:13 AM

09:15 AM

Ade Olaiya : 

In response to C, we need legal measures to combat Afrophobia and systemic racism being developed and implemented globally, in accordance with SDG 16

09:15 AM

Siphiwe Baleka : 

Question C, What do you want to see prioritized in the next 5 years? An international effort to use genetic testing to reverse ethnocide by identifying the maternal and paternal lineages of the descendants of people taken from the African continent and brought to the Americas.

09:16 AM

09:16 AM

Modi Ntambwe : 

Hello I would like to share the statement of PAD BELGIUM Observatory of human rights

09:17 AM

Saeed_Fotohi nia_Youth Against Racism : 

But no one knows about the Decade and the campaign outside of the UN community...

09:17 AM

Ade Olaiya : 

Establishment of the Permanent Forum and the UN Declaration for PAD needs to be completed asap. It is a year since we discussed the same in Washington and made our recommendations to the WGEPAD.

09:17 AM

Judy L. Richards : 

The Permanent Afrikan Forum is key in engaging with our communities and promoting our needs. I like Michael's suggestion of a network of experts. What we experience can be different in each nation state so we need as many voices sharing information to identify potential regional and international actions.

09:18 AM

James Aiken : 

I remember that Nyanchama had a powerpoint, is that supposed to be shown atm? Alternatively, could this also be sent around?

09:18 AM

Cliff_Kuumba : 

Yes Mama Okemwa, the issues faced by Afrikans in one area of the world are the same as those faced by us everywhere. Those who try to force us apart on the basis of a contrived difference in our experiences are ahistorical, un-factual and harmful to Black Unity and Pan-Afrikanism. Support for civil society organizations is critical!

09:18 AM

09:20 AM

Ade Olaiya : 

https://en.unesco.org/inclusivepolicylab/e-teams/people-african-descent-and-sustainable-development-goals

09:20 AM

Cliff_Kuumba : 

I would love to be able to see Mama Okemwa's PowerPoint presentation! Can the file itself be shared so we can watch it at our convenience? Is contact information on the participants available so people can communicate with each other if desired? This could be a "shot in the arm" for building that civil society network.

09:21 AM

Saeed_Fotohi nia_Youth Against Racism : 

www.youthagainstracism.com

09:21 AM

09:22 AM

Judy L. Richards : 

GAC is on gacintern.com international Website, www.gacuk.org.uk and Global Afrikan Congressuk - Reparations Now! Facebook group.

09:23 AM

Nyanchama Okemwa : 

Here is a link to the PPP that unfortunately did not work out during my presentation - UN WGEPAD the 26th Session of WGEPAD_November 2020.key

09:24 AM

09:28 AM

Judy L. Richards : 

Our nation states need not just to collect disaggregated data but work with civil society to examine what they tell us and how we use them to work towards a better society. The uk is very good at commissioning reports but then doesn't implement their recommendations.

09:28 AM

Ade Olaiya : 

merci saeed

09:28 AM

James Aiken : 

Great point Judy!! Studies are vital but the UK government is far too happy to commission them, get the good optics of doing so and then ignore the recommendations entirely

09:29 AM

James Aiken : 

ECHR (or another better body) needs to be given the power (and proper leadership) to enforce implementation

09:30 AM

Derrick L. Washington : 

These are excellent resources, thank you. These "side meeting chats" and networking really help better connect us.

09:31 AM

Cliff_Kuumba : 

The point Bro. James Aiken makes about commissioning studies (for the sake of appearing responsive) that are then ignored is exactly why there must be an increased focus on what the UN itself can do, through the OHCHR and WGEPAD, to increase the pressure on these miscreant nations at the international level. More intensive involvement with on-the-ground civil society organizations so that, when the UN is mentioned at local community Town Hall Meetings, we don't get cynical comments and dirty looks, will be very important.

09:33 AM

Siphiwe Baleka : 

My network of human rights defenders are complaining that we are not addressing the issue of decolonization - for example, the AfroDescendant Nation in the United States has filed a request to be put on the UN decolonization list. after two years, no response has been received.

09:34 AM

Ade Olaiya : 

Good Point speaker .. No.3

09:36 AM

09:41 AM

Siphiwe Baleka : 

From Cecile Johnson, Pendo Center for Human Rights and Self Determination "The working group needs to do a better job at giving access to members of civil society here in the USA. The failure to see that part of this issue is still colonization and the failure to decolonize the African Descendants here in the USA. We have filed a Declaration of Self determination on 3/18/20 and are known as African Descendant Nation but access to the UN agencies which assist us with the process to be decolonized and acceptance of our request to be added to the Decolonization list."

09:41 AM

Ade Olaiya : 

Hopefully the new administration coming in will give you a voice in the UN again...

09:42 AM

Roger Wareham : 

Don't bet on it.

09:43 AM

Ade Olaiya : 

hahaha .. better than currently anyhow ... bon chance

09:43 AM

Modi Ntambwe : 

Siphiwe absolutely right

09:43 AM

09:48 AM

Judy L. Richards : 

Looking forward to seeing the written statements. I understand others will submit written statements. How do we hear what will be done with them? Will there be a summary of common and/or major issues and an opportunity for us to agree what we do about them? It would be really good to work together to address the issues. GACuk has a weekly Sunday evening anti-racist call. Colleagues join from Brazil, India, South Afrika, the Caribbean, US, Ireland and other parts of Afrika. We had a presentation yesterday by the State of the Afrikan Diaspora organisation working on the AU 6th Region, for instance. You are welcome to join. Speakers are always welcome. Contact secretarygacuk@aol.com to get e-mailed Zoom link.

09:48 AM

Judy L. Richards : 

Global Afrikan Congress Family Gathering is being planned for Ghana September 2021. There may be sessions open to non Afrikans but it is essentially an Afrikan event looking at DDPA, Reparations and all other issues of concern to Afrikan people. You can register interest and get more information at gacintern.com and secretarygacuk@aol.com

09:50 AM

Ade Olaiya : 

African Voices Forum is planning to host an IDPAD Summit in Bristol next year. Please contact africanvoicesforum@yahoo.co.uk

09:53 AM

Derrick L. Washington : 

can you please share information about next week's public meeting?

09:53 AM

09:54 AM

Cliff_Kuumba : 

How can we ensure follow-up to this discussion? That has been a major issue in almost every movement I have encountered. I would like to be kept informed about how we move forward from here. cliff@kuumbareport.com

09:55 AM

Nyanchama Okemwa : 

Is the information in the chat also being recorded? There are some interesting comments that I may have missed

09:55 AM

Christina Saunders (Secretary WGEPAD) : 

https://ohchr.org/EN/Issues/Racism/WGAfricanDescent/Pages/Session27.aspx

09:55 AM

Christina Saunders (Secretary WGEPAD) : 

the link will be different for the 27th session

09:55 AM

09:57 AM

Christina Saunders (Secretary WGEPAD) : 

please register for the 27th session The Urgency of Now: Systemic Racism and the lessons of 2020

09:58 AM

09:58 AM

Christina Saunders (Secretary WGEPAD) : 

Regional meetings will continue tomorrow

09:58 AM

Ade Olaiya : 

Merci WGEPAD .... Keep On Keeping On ...

09:58 AM

09:59 AM

Roger Wareham : 

Congratulations to the Working Group for hosting this meeting and for raising the issues from the grassroots which the higher organs in the U.N. don't want to deal with. The push for the Decade and the International Year came from the WGPAD. The theme came from the WGPAD with input from the grassroots community.

09:59 AM

09:59 AM

Siphiwe Baleka : 

Roger, I sent you an email.

09:59 AM

Adelle Blackett : 

Important work thank you - the essence of my statement is in this op ed: https://www.justsecurity.org/71579/the-un-and-its-specialized-agencies-cannot-live-on-past-laurels-the-time-for-courageous-leadership-on-anti-black-racism-is-now/

09:59 AM

09:59 AM

Cliff_Kuumba : 

Many thanks for this session and for the work that WGEPAD continues to do.

BBHAGSIA President Conversation with the Pendo Center for Human Rights and Self-Determination

The American Declaration of Rights and Duties of Man serve as a safety net for U.S. Afro-Descendants. Just because the U.S. government is not a party to the American Convention on Human Rights, does not mean we can not get a remedy. The Pendo Center for Human Rights and Self-Determination is working series of cases citing numerous violations based on the United States' ongoing infringements of the right to use and occupy their ancestral land in the United States. Join us today as we discuss the movement in Chicago, Detroit, Georgia, Louisiana, Mississippi, and Oklahoma to secure property rights and stop constant infringements on U.S. Afro-descendant's land, and cultural, biological, real property rights.

Listen to the show

Pendo Center.JPG

BBHAGSIA President attends session: Anti-Black racism and police brutality: HRDs’ expectations from the UNHRC

BBHAGSIA President attends session: Anti-Black racism and police brutality: HRDs’ expectations from the UNHRC

On November 18, 20202, BBHAGSIA President Siphiwe Baleka attended the session, Anti-Black racism and police brutality: HRDs’ (Human Rights Defenders') expectations from the UNHRC (United Nations Human Rights Council) hosted by the International Service of Human Rights. Mr. Baleka’s cousin, Jacob Blake, was shot seven times in the back by police in Kenosha, WI back in August, 2020. The officers have not been brought to justice.

Panellists:

Salimah Hankins, U.S. Human Rights Network

Mireille Fanon-Mendès France, Fondation Frantz Fanon

Douglas Belchior, Uneafro Brasil and Coalizão Negra por Direitos

Rodje Malcom, Jamaicans for Justice

Esther Mamadou, Implementation Team for the International Decade for People of African Descent Spain

Deji Adeyanju, Concerned Nigerians

Below is the discussion that took place in the session chat:

From Cecile Johnson to Everyone: 09:29 AM

We must address that the old colonial “masters” have disproportionate influence in the UN at the expense of people of color globally.

From Yolanda Lewis to Everyone: 09:31 AM

We must also address the international laws against genocides, human trafficking, institutionalized slavery, and substitution of the autochthonous. There is no voice because they keep calling the autochthonous black and say their lives matter when black is a brand used for genocide.

From Siphiwe Baleka to All Panelists: 09:33 AM

The Lineage Restoration Movement is changing this "autochthonous" issue. 750,000 African Americans have taken the African Ancestry test and identified their maternal or paternal lineage ancestry and are now identifying themselves by their genetic ancestry. The movement is growing. https://www.balanta.org/news/lineage-restoration-movement

From Vickie Casanova-Willis to Everyone: 09:34 AM

From USHRN People of African Descent Working Group; Westside Justice Center, US. Sending condolences and strength to the mothers and families of our stolen ones. African descendent families in the U.S. are experiencing the genocide of racist practices via police brutality, police torture and murders, as these mothers have so eloquently shared. And also, to "death by incarceration". Wrongful incarceration, excessive sentencing, life in the criminal punishment system. We need international support and accountability to expose and eradicate the entire racist US law enforcement system. vcw.ushrn@gmail.com

From Cecile Johnson to Everyone: 09:35 AM

4 years later the US has not done anything to address the findings of the 2016 visit to the USA.

From Siphiwe Baleka to All Panelists: 09:35 AM

My cousin is Jacob Blake. He was shot seven times in the back in Kenosha, WI. The officers have not been brought to justice. https://www.balanta.org/.../statement-on-the-shooting-of...

From Yolanda Lewis to Everyone: 09:37 AM

Belligerent occupation is supposed to be temporary - the current occupation is well beyond temporary and unlawful.

From Beverly John to Everyone: 09:37 AM

…and, of course, we have actually increased violations since 2016.

From Cecile Johnson to Everyone: 09:37 AM

The Afro Descendants in the USA are currently a colonized people. we need the 1960 decolonization act to apply to us. We have requested to be added to the decolonization list with no response.

From Yolanda Lewis to Everyone: 09:39 AM

According to the Liber Codes Art. 2.

Martial Law does not cease during the hostile occupation, except by special proclamation, ordered by the commander in chief; or by special mention in the treaty of peace concluding the war, when the occupation of a place or territory continues beyond the conclusion of peace as one of the conditions of the same. So long as we keep the racial brand we are not protected private civilians.

From Cecile Johnson to Everyone: 09:41 AM

France is a hypocrite like the USA. look at its treatment of the alleged ex colonies. Its time for truth .

From Hugh Bankole Olaiya to Everyone: 09:41 AM

Merci Mireille

From Cecile Johnson to Everyone: 09:49 AM

Brazil has a majority black population but look at who is in power? State sponsored terrorism similar to what we are experiencing in the USA.

it’s time for wherever we are we must be self determined. Self determination is our only solution

From Hugh Bankole Olaiya to Everyone: 09:49 AM

obrigado

From Beverly John to Everyone: 09:49 AM

Brazil, the USA are using the same playbook…

From Fabiana Leibl to Everyone: 09:52 AM

Are there discussions in your countries on concrete measures for police reform or new models for security policies? Is there any specific ask for the OHCHR (either in this report, or moving forward) in that regard?

From Cecile Johnson to Everyone: 09:53 AM

We are prisoners of war. a war against black people launched by the papal bull in the 1400’s

From Me to Everyone: 09:55 AM

How can people who are the descendants of the people who survived the middle passage of the criminal European Trans-Atlantic trafficking and enslavement bring charges and receive remedy for the crime of "ethnocide"? What is the process?

From Cecile Johnson to Everyone: 09:59 AM

All of our ex colonies accepted a Trojan horse upon independence where we kept all these colonial vestiges and we wonder why we see the same system globally.

From Ann Marie Clark to Everyone: 10:00 AM

Thank you to all of the panelists. I am sorry that I have to sign off early.

From Vickie Casanova-Willis to Everyone: 10:00 AM

@Rodje - this is the same in the US. The system works exactly as planned, centuries ago.

From Hugh Bankole Olaiya to Everyone: 10:01 AM

Originalism

From Vickie Casanova-Willis to Everyone: 10:03 AM

Can/will this collective consider broadening our human rights advocacy around "police brutality" to "law enforcement" accountability? It is the entire corrupt and racist system we must interrupt.

From Cecile Johnson to Everyone: 10:04 AM

how do we contact Rodje Malcolm?

From Yolanda Lewis to Everyone: 10:04 AM

How can we connect with participants and panelists afterwards? yolewis@digitalmobility.net

From Janvieve Williams Comrie to Everyone: 10:05 AM

Will the recording of this call be shared?

From Hugh Bankole Olaiya to Everyone: 10:05 AM

https://systemicjustice.law.harvard.edu/

From Janvieve Williams Comrie to Everyone: 10:05 AM

How can we get in touch with the panelists?

From CO-HOST: Tess Mcevoy (ISHR) to Everyone: 10:06 AM

The recording of this event will be available on ISHR YouTube @ISHRGlobal after the event

From Hugh Bankole Olaiya to Everyone: 10:07 AM

great

From Colleen Daniels to Everyone: 10:08 AM

We are looking at law enforcement expenditure versus national harm reduction budgets. The war on drugs has disproportionately impacted Black and Brown people, it has entrenched police violence as the norm and trillions of dollars has been wasted. In Thailand, for example, redirecting just 1% of the total drug law enforcement budget for 2019, would equal an estimated USD 17,670,895, an amount that would represent more than a fivefold increase on the 2015 allocation for harm reduction (which was the year when the greatest amount of funding was ever allocated to such efforts in Thailand). Redirecting 10% of Thai drug law enforcement budget for 2019 to support harm reduction would represent USD 176,708,957, an amount that could finance more than 10% of the financial gap for harm reduction across the entire planet for a full year. https://www.hri.global/contents/2051 We can and should call for defunding the police and moving resources to community based responses.

From Vickie Casanova-Willis to Everyone: 10:09 AM

^^^

From Hugh Bankole Olaiya to Everyone: 10:09 AM

https://en.unesco.org/.../people-african-descent-and...

From Lamar Bailey to Everyone: 10:11 AM

Thank you Esther for this information

From Cecile Johnson to Everyone: 10:13 AM

thank you Cecile Johnson cecilejohnsonAihr@protonmail.com

From Mireille Fanon-Mendès France to Everyone: 10:14 AM

sorry I have to leave, thank you for organizing this dialogue, very informative and informative; hoping it will be followed by a second « round »

From Hugh Bankole Olaiya to Everyone: 10:15 AM

merci Esther, good to see y'all

From Vickie Casanova-Willis to Everyone: 10:16 AM

Many thanks to all the panelists and Salma for organizing. Very informative update. Looking forward to next steps

From Beverly John to Everyone: 10:18 AM

Can we collect the hashtags from all the campaigns so we can share them on our respective websites and social media?

From Hugh Bankole Olaiya to Everyone: 10:19 AM

oshe Deji … tell it like is

From Beverly John to Everyone: 10:21 AM

I like that idea…

From Hugh Bankole Olaiya to Everyone: 10:21 AM

old colonial laws in place globally … systemic legal reform is imperative

From Vickie Casanova-Willis to Everyone: 10:22 AM

^^^

From Lydia Vicente to Everyone: 10:23 AM

You can also hear the voices and testimonies of victims of police brutality, profiling (Spain) with English subtitles here:

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=uA7OfbU6_qA

From Hugh Bankole Olaiya to Everyone: 10:23 AM

gracias Lydia

From Vickie Casanova-Willis to Everyone: 10:26 AM

Here is pre-UPR testimony shared last month by directly impacted USHRN members and civil society allies https://www.aclu.org/.../universal-periodic-review-united...

From Hugh Bankole Olaiya to Everyone: 10:28 AM

merci

From Lamar Bailey to Everyone: 10:32 AM

Rodje!! Thank you for speaking THE TRUTH!

From Salimah Hankins (she/they) to Everyone: 10:32 AM

Rodje, great point!

From Beverly John to Everyone: 10:32 AM

Excellent point!

From Ashley Emuka to Everyone: 10:32 AM

Yes Rodje! U.S. oriented reforms, but a global approach is indeed needed (aemuka@uua.org)

From Hugh Bankole Olaiya to Everyone: 10:32 AM

Tell it like it IS ...

From Cecile Johnson to Everyone: 10:34 AM

so true

keeping it real . thank you

And a lot of police trained in the USA is from Israel

From Hugh Bankole Olaiya to Everyone: 10:34 AM

well done Rodje

From Vickie Casanova-Willis to Everyone: 10:34 AM

TEACH

From Beverly John to Everyone: 10:35 AM

Alright now! That’s real talk!

From Cecile Johnson to Everyone: 10:35 AM

finally

From Isabelle Mamadou to Everyone: 10:35 AM

Thank you for this point of view Rodje Malcolm! Very interesting

From Hugh Bankole Olaiya to Everyone: 10:35 AM

Some Police in Jamaica and Nigeria are trained by the UK Forces

From Cecile Johnson to Everyone: 10:35 AM

Thank you so much Rodje .

From Floriane Borel to Everyone: 10:35 AM

Really great points Rodje!

From Hugh Bankole Olaiya to Everyone: 10:35 AM

not to mention the military

From Lydia Vicente to Everyone: 10:41 AM

COVID-19, systemic racism and global protests - Report of the Working Group of Experts on People of African Descent* https://undocs.org/en/A/HRC/45/44

From Beverly John to Everyone: 10:42 AM

Excellent response Esther! Thank you.

From Isabelle Mamadou to Everyone: 10:42 AM

Many thanks Esther Mamadou!!

From Cecile Johnson to Everyone: 10:43 AM

Great presentation Esther

From Hugh Bankole Olaiya to Everyone: 10:43 AM

good data as usual Esther, muchas gracias

From Lydia Vicente to Everyone: 10:43 AM

Very well said, Esther. We need to move to "enforcement", application, implementation

From Vickie Casanova-Willis to Everyone: 10:44 AM

^^^

From Hugh Bankole Olaiya to Everyone: 10:44 AM

oui

From Cecile Johnson to Everyone: 10:45 AM

I agree on sanctions but all these countries represented here today need to be sanctioned

From Hugh Bankole Olaiya to Everyone: 10:46 AM

... and others here in Europe ...

From Vickie Casanova-Willis to Everyone: 10:49 AM

https://breatheact.org/.../The-BREATHE-Act-PDF_FINAL3-1.pdf

From Hugh Bankole Olaiya to Everyone: 10:49 AM

Can all participants be sent a link to the video of this event when it is prepared ?

From Salma El Hosseiny - ISHR to Everyone: 10:50 AM

yes

From Yolanda Lewis to Everyone: 10:50 AM

Free resources and training for equity www.digitalmobility.net

From Anastassiya Miller to Everyone: 10:50 AM

Thanks for sharing this

From DANIELLE SERRES to Everyone: 10:50 AM

Thank you Vicki. Very useful to understand what we are talking about

From Hugh Bankole Olaiya to Everyone: 10:50 AM

merci

From Sarah Davila-Ruhaak to Everyone: 10:50 AM

Thank you for sharing that.

From Vickie Casanova-Willis to Everyone: 10:51 AM

Thank you for your excellent presentations Salimah!

From Salimah Hankins (she/they) to Everyone: 10:53 AM

Thank you Douglas and all of the panelists!

From Cecile Johnson to Everyone: 10:53 AM

that’s right black organizations want consultative status

From Anastassiya Miller to Everyone: 10:53 AM

And this is a very important point from speakers about acknowledgment - we have to acknowledge first publicly that this issue exists.

From Esther Mamadou to Everyone: 10:54 AM

Thank you ISHR, the panelist and all of you listening to us.

From Cecile Johnson to Everyone: 10:54 AM

and can the compilation of these suggestions be shared also

From JOYCE HOPE SCOTT to Everyone: 10:55 AM

The deafening silence of the AU around the state-sanctioned violence against Black citizens in the USA, Brazil, Spain, Nigeria and other countries is quite telling. Should they not be called to task to advocate for immediate reforms in these countries or make their position known? They have a powerful voice as an all-African organization that has yet to speak out on behalf of their brothers and sisters in these diasporas that are suffering police and other kinds of abuse. What are your thoughts on this?

Prof. Joyce Hope Scott/Boston hope2100@yahoo.com

From Mohammed Haque to Everyone: 10:55 AM

From Peace And Justice Alliance, Canada, Since 2009 we have been calling to UN and Int’l organizations to extend their support to halt extra judicial killing, enforced disappearances, corruption, intimidation, custodial death, illegal imprison in Bangladesh. Bangladesh vulnerable people feeling that their voice has been ignored, how you or your organization could assist to the victim people of Bangladesh for their human rights and social justice? Kindly extend your hand to us, www.peaceandjusticealliance.ca; please contact : peaceandjusticealliance@gmail.com; Thanks

From Anastassiya Miller to Everyone: 10:55 AM

Law reforms are very important but also important that people know their rights and can use law to protect themself, so law should works for all

From Tonya Teichert to Everyone: 10:57 AM

Just a note that the "defund the police" slogan is not widely accepted. The premise of reallocation is, but theslogan is being used to ensure that we won't be able to see the Breathe Act come into play.

From Vickie Casanova-Willis to Everyone: 10:57 AM

also in the US South, many/most of police are Black/African descendants

From Tonya Teichert to Everyone: 10:58 AM

This was an amazing panel and discussion! I really want to see this conversation continue. Thank you ISHR/UNHRC for doing this.

From Vickie Casanova-Willis to Everyone: 10:58 AM

@Tonya Agreed!

From Jackie Zammuto to Everyone: 10:58 AM

excellent panel, thank you!

From Isabelle Mamadou to Everyone: 10:58 AM

Well said Esther! We need effective actions.

From Tonya Teichert to Everyone: 10:59 AM

We also need to make sure that this conversation and the importance of Black lives are not lost on other people's agenda.

From Cecile Johnson to Everyone: 10:59 AM

yes the silence of the African Union is deafening

From Tonya Teichert to Everyone: 10:59 AM

What I have seen from this single discussion is that there is no place in the world where it is safe or okay to be Black. We need to keep that message front and center.

From Anastassiya Miller to Everyone: 11:00 AM

And also from my personal experience, it is important to use different approaches to talk about this - art can make things different. Like for instance street arts, documentary etc. Like this recently released movie from NYC: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=oEie9YH0E4c...

From Cecile Johnson to Everyone: 11:00 AM

excellent panel. thank you so much for your words and wisdom

From Hugh Bankole Olaiya to Everyone: 11:00 AM

AU got wars in Africa on their plate presently

Panellists:

Salimah Hankins, U.S. Human Rights Network

Mireille Fanon-Mendès France, Fondation Frantz Fanon

Douglas Belchior, Uneafro Brasil and Coalizão Negra por Direitos

Rodje Malcom, Jamaicans for Justice

Esther Mamadou, Implementation Team for the International Decade for People of African Descent Spain

Deji Adeyanju, Concerned Nigerians

+ Videos by Dayana Blanco Acendra,Founder and Director General of Ilex Acción Jurídica (Colombia), and Mothers against Police Brtuality (USA)

Salimah Hankins, is the Interim Executive Director of the U.S. Human Rights Network. Salimah began her engagement with the Network in 2013 and has served as a human rights consultant advising domestic civil and human rights groups on their advocacy efforts before various United Nations human rights bodies. In 2014, Salimah organised the civil society side of the U.S government review before the UN Committee on the Elimination of Racial Discrimination in Geneva, Switzerland. In addition to this, Salimah has produced the last six annual human rights reports for the Network which chronicles human rights abuses in the United States through the lens of local grassroots groups and national organisations. Salimah has also served as Director of Human Rights for a Brooklyn-based human rights organization working primarily with Black women survivors of sexual violence. Salimah began her legal career as an associate at the ACLU of Maryland, advocating for the rights of low-income communities of color living in Baltimore’s public housing. Admitted to practice law in Massachusetts, the District of Columbia, and California, Salimah most recently served as Senior Staff Attorney for Community Legal Services in East Palo Alto, CA. While there, she worked on anti-gentrification and displacement issues and employed a community lawyering approach to legal representation. In this role, Salimah worked with community groups to secure a $20 million settlement from Facebook which created an affordable housing fund worth. $75 million. Salimah was given the Marriage Equality Advocate award from the ACLU of Maryland, served as a human rights fellow at the Urban Justice Center, and was selected for the Whitney M. Young fellowship at Columbia University

Mireille Fanon-Mendès France is the President of Foundation Frantz Fanon, former chair of the Working group on People of African descent, prominent anti-racism human rights defender and scholar on racial justice and decoloniality.

Douglas Belchior, is the founder of Uneafro Brasil, a grassroots organisation focused on educating poor, black youth and mobilizing around political issues in Brazil, and the co-founder of Coalizão Negra por Direitos (Black Coalition for Rights in Brazil), which includes more than 150 organisations across the country.

Rodje Malcolm is the Executive Director of Jamaicans for Justice. Jamaicans for Justice is a non-governmental human rights organisation that provides legal services in response to human rights violations, conducts research and advocacy to advance social justice, and conducts training and education programmes to build a more just society. Rodje leads the organization’s strategic direction and advocacy.

Esther Mamadou is a human rights defender expert in forced migration. Her experiences in the fight against Anti-Black racism from a human rights and gender perspective include working in the UK supporting refugees, in Ecuador supporting Afrocolombian women refugees in the context of the armed conflict and in Spain advising on migration and refugee law since 2004. She is currently the coordinator of the Refugee Programme at Movimiento Por La Paz in Valencia. As part of the implementation team of the International Decade for People of African Descent 2015-2014 in Spain, she is supporting the efforts in fighting anti-Black racism and police violence suffered by people of African descent and Africans in the diaspora in Spain and internationally.

Deji Adeyanju is one of the leading human rights defenders in Nigerian who is dedicated to fighting for justice, preservation of democratic ideals, protection of civic space, rights of vulnerable groups and rule of law. He is a former unionist and prominent activist in Nigeria. He has been arrested and jailed severally by the government for leading protesters and fighting for the rights of persecuted journalists and civil rights campaigners. He is the Convener of Concerned Nigerians Group, a civil rights pressure group in Nigeria. Comrade Deji Adeyanju has led the #EndSARS campaign against police brutality in Nigeria with other activists since 2016 until the advocacy gained global attention. He has also led campaigns calling for electoral reforms, #SayNoToSociaMediaBill which is an advocacy against social media regulation in the country and several other campaigns.

Background information:

In response to global protests denouncing systemic racism and police brutality and to a request from the families of George Floyd, Breonna Taylor, Philando Castile and Michael Brown, supported by over 600 NGOs, the African Group convened an urgent debate at the Human Rights Council in June 2020. The African Group had proposed the establishment of an international commission of inquiry on system racism and police brutality in the USA and other parts of the world. However, due to immense diplomatic pressure from the USA and its allies, the Council decided to instead mandate the High Commissioner with preparing a report, due in June 2021, on systemic racism, police violence against Africans and people of African descent, and government responses to anti racism protests and share regular updates on the issue at all Council’s sessions.

BBHAGSIA PRESIDENT ATTENDS SESSION OF THE AFRICAN PEER REVIEW MECHANISM (APRM) OF THE AFRICAN UNION

BBHAGSIA President Siphiwe Baleka was asked to Chair the Panel, “Sixth region – Critical thinking and Action Plan towards re-integration at the African Union” at the 2nd Annual Centre for Global Africa (CGA) – APRM Pan African Development Conference on 12-14 November 2020 hosted by the African Peer Review Mechanism of the African Union and the Centre for Global Africa. While Mr. Baleka did not chair the panel, here is what he asked the panel on behalf of the BBHAGSIA and the Lineage Restoration Movement and all black people in the United States whose ancestors survived the criminal European Trans Atlantic trafficking of people of African ancestry and heritage:

From Siphiwe Blake to All Panelists: 11:33 AM

1. There is a perception, as evidenced, for example, the overwhelming number of this conference panelists’ “accents” and birthplaces, that the AU 6th Region initiative is something for African expatriates and not those of us whose ancestors were taken from Africa against their will. Also, most of the outreach is perceived as only interested in getting money through investment and heritage tourism, which is producing some negative pushback. Besides outreach to the HBCUs, what must the Diaspora Division/CIDO do to rectify this?

2. Why, after 17 years, has the African Union failed to seat any of the 20 representatives from the Diaspora in ECOSOCC? What must the Diaspora Division/CIDO do to rectify this and to ensure that such representatives come from the segment of the diaspora that resulted from the slave trade so that that population is not further marginalized at the AU?

My question was especially intended for Ato Teferi Melese, Director for Diaspora Information & Research/ CIDO which is responsible for diaspora affairs at the African Union.

Unfortunately, Ambassador Dr. Salah Siddig Hammad, Head of Governance at the Department of Political Affairs at the African Union, did not answer the questions directly. Instead, he reiterated that the Diaspora is welcome to participate. However, when Dr. Njeri Mwagiru pushed him further, the Ambassador rejected any responsibility and instead, blamed the Diaspora, saying that the Diaspora "wrongly interpreted the meaning of the 6th Region" and that the question should be asked of the Diaspora itself. This is a complete misrepresentation of what happened since 2003 up to the present. Further, here is excerpts from the discussion that occurred in the panel chat room:

From Ronnette H. to Everyone: 11:39 AM

Wow -His choice of words

From Dr. Akwasi Osei to Me, All Panelists: 11:40 AM

Thanks for your question. It truly is a perception; in all my years as an immigrant, it has been descendants of slaves in Africa who have been my teachers, from Molefi Asante, to Maulana Karenga. And the glue is a belief in the pan African mindset. of slaves in America

From Siphiwe Baleka to All Panelists: 11:43 AM

My question was posed not in the general context of Pan Africanism, bust specifically in the context of AU 6th Region mobilization. I am afraid I have been totally misunderstood.

It was not meant as a launching pad for a history of Pan African contributions, it was meant as a current critique of the actual events/participation that have been held under quasi-official AU/6th Regions banner. The most important question, the initial participation in ECOSOCC, still has not been addressed.

Unfortunately, the Ambassador only reiterated that there is a "welcome". The practice and implementation in official AU organs, like ECOSOCC, evidences otherwise...

From Dr. Akwasi Osei to Me, All Panelists: 11:43 AM

Ok, Siphiwe Sorry if I misread you. How to make concrete the 6th region has been an ongoing issue. The CGA-APRM collaboration is only a way to make it concrete

From Siphiwe Baleka to All Panelists: 11:44 AM

No worries. This is what dialogue is for. Understanding.

From Ronnette H. to Everyone: 11:45 AM

"Black people" as mentioned by the professor before may change the way their classify themselves and say the term "African" or "African American" instead of just "American" or "black" when speaking of Africans both on the Motherland and American born "diaspora"

From Siphiwe Baleka to All Panelists: 11:47 AM

Can you provide the email for Ato Teferi Melese?

FYI- 750,000 "black" people have taken the African Ancestry DNA test and are classifying themselves based on their maternal and paternal ancestry.

From Siphiwe Baleka to All Panelists: 11:52 AM

That work was started by civil society in the Diaspora in 2003. CIDO obstructed it. CIDO never provided clear guidelines and left the responsibility to the Diaspora. We created a procedure and hosted elections but it was rejected by CIDO. After 17 years, it is CIDO's responsibility to say clearly what the process for seating the representatives will be. Remember, this was THEIR initiative and after 17 years, there are zero representatives. Not because of lack of effort on the Diaspora's part.

Please review.

http://www.siphiwebaleka.com/.../exposing-the-au-6th...

CGA APRM Conference2.jpg

Mr. Baleka’s comments on this post are in no way intended to detract from the great work of the Center for Global Africa or of Professor Ezra Aharone at Delaware State University.

The African Peer Review Mechanism (APRM) is just that - a way for African people to review the activities of the African Union. It must be receptive and responsive to critical analysis and input from all members of the African Union's six regions.

Please read Mr. Baleka’s critique of the AU 6t Region Mobilization effort in the United States:

THE AU 6TH REGION DIASPORA INITIATIVE IS FAILING MEMBERS OF THE DIASPORA WHOSE ANCESTORS WERE ENSLAVED IN THE UNITED STATES

ACTUAL PICTURE OF AU ECOSOCC REPRESENTATION

“In the past three AU Summits in June 2015, January 2016 and July 2016, the AU Executive Council issued decisions for the full representation of Member States at the ECOSOCC.

Based on the ECOSOCC Constitution, 152 representatives are to compose the AU ECOSOCC General Assembly: 2 from each Member State; 10 at regional level; 8 at continental level, 20 from the Diaspora; and 6 appointed by special consideration by the Chairperson of the African Union Commission. South Sudan brings the number to 152 with additional two seats. You can read the Report and find out which States have full, half and no representation.

Currently, AU ECOSOCC operates at less than half its full capacity with resultant imbalance in Member State and gender ( contrast with AU Commissioners) representations; consequent demoralization of the disenfranchised, and predictable loss of opportunities.

23 Member States and Continental African Diaspora that steadily contributes to the Gross National Product of Member States through remittances, Diaspora Sovereign bonds, and hometown investments, have no representation. Five Member States have partial representation. There is no special appointee.

Members of the ECOSOCC are duly elected representatives to serve constituencies - the people - as a core mandate in advancing the voice the civil society in realizing the Vision of the AU.

It is realistic to say ECOSOCC Representatives cannot properly advise African Heads of States, make evidence-based recommendations, and implement AU policies without necessarily being hands-on with the people.

Each Member State of the AU is entitled to 2 Seats at the AU ECOSOCC


ECOWAS: Western Africa: 15 Member States: Entitled Representation 30

Full Representation: Benin; Cote D'Ivoire; Ghana; Nigeria; Togo: 10 Representatives.

Partial Representation: Senegal: 1 Representative out of 2.

Total Representatives for Western Region: 11.

No Representation: Burkina Faso; Cape Verde; Gambia; Guinea; Guinea Bissau; Liberia; Mali; Niger; Sierra Leone.Vacancies: 18

Total Vacancies: 19

*Guinea is considered vacant unless verified after an unfortunate news.

Result: Out of 30 expected representation for ECOWAS' 15 Member States, there are 11 Representatives and 19 vacancies. Representation is 37%. ECOWAS is under-presented by 63%.


Southern Africa: 13 Member States: Entitled Representation: 26



Out of 26 expected representation for the Southern Region, there are 8 Representatives and 18 vacancies. Representation is 31%. The Southern Region is under-presented by 69%.

Note: Countries that are officially in SADC but in another Regional Economic Community such as Tanzania (Eastern) and Congo DRC (Central) are not listed in order to avoid duplication and an over count of Member States of the African Union.



Eastern Africa. 11 Member States: Entitled Representation: 22

Full Representation: Djibouti, Eritrea, Ethiopia, Kenya, Somalia; Sudan; Uganda: 14 Representatives.

Partial Representation: South Sudan (1); Tanzania (1): 2 Representatives out of 4.

Total Representatives: 16.

No Representation: Rwanda; Burundi: 4 Vacancies.

Total Vacancies: 6

Out of 22 expected representation for Eastern Region, there are 16 Representatives and 6 vacancies. Representation is 73%. The Eastern Region is under-presented by 27%.


Central Africa. 9 Member States. Entitled Representation :18.

Full Representation: Cameroon, Congo DRC. 4 Representatives

No Representation: Central African Republic, Chad, Congo (Brazzaville), Equatorial Guinea; Gabon, Sao Tome and Principle: 16 Vacancies.

Out of 18 expected representation for the Central African Region, there are 4 Representatives and 16 vacancies. Representation is 22%. The Central Africa Region is under-presented by 78%.

Note: Burundi is accounted for in the Eastern Region.


Northern Africa. 6 Member States. Entitled Representation: 12

Full Representation: Algeria; Egypt; Mauritania; Tunisia; Sahrawi Arab Democratic Republic: 10 Representatives:

No Representation: Libya: 2 Vacancies

Out of 12 expected representation for the Northern African Region, there are 10 Representatives and 2 vacancies. Representation is 83%. Northern Africa is under-presented by 17%.

SUMMARY
Total Member States of the African Union: 54

Western Africa: 15; Southern Africa: 13; Eastern Africa: 11; Central Africa: 9; Northern Africa: 6.

Expected Representation per ECOSOCC Constitution based on 2 Representatives from each Member State: 108

Current Representatives: Western Africa: 11; Southern Africa 8; Eastern Africa: 16; Central Africa: 4; Northern Africa: 10:

Out of 108 expected representation for AU Member States, there are 49 representatives and 59 vacancies. Representation is 45%. Member States' Representation is under-presented by 55%.

23 Member States have no representation at the ECOSOCC and 5 have partial representation.

Entitled Representation Per ECOSOCC Constitution at Regional Level: 10

Western: 2 Representatives. Senegalese Nationals.

Southern: 1 Representative. Zambian National.

Eastern: 1 Representative. Sudanese National.

Central African Region: No Representation.

Northern Africa: 2 Representatives. Libyan and Sahrawi Arab Democratic Republic Nationals.

Current Representatives: 6

Total Vacancies: 4

Out of 10 expected representation at Regional Level, there are 6 Representatives and 4 vacancies. Representation is 60%. Regional Representation is under-presented by 40%.

Entitled Representation Per ECOSOCC Constitution at Continental Level: 8

2 Sudanese Nationals (2 from Eastern Region).

2 South Africa Nationals, 1 Zambian National (3 from the Southern Region).

1 Ghanaian National, 1 Togolese National; 1 Nigerian National (3 from the Western Region)

Current Representatives: 8

Out of 8 expected representation at Continental Level, there are 8 Representatives. There is no vacancy. Representation at the Continental Level is 100%.

Note: CSOs at Continental Levels must be operating in at least 3 Member States.



Entitled Representation Per ECOSOCC Constitution at Member State; Regional and Continental Levels: 126.

Total Current Representation at the Member State; Regional and Continental Levels: 63.
Total Vacancies: 63.

Out of 126 expected representation at Member State, Regional and Continental Levels, there 63 there Representatives and 63 vacancies. Representation is 50% of expected capacity.

Entitled Representation per ECOSOCC Constitution at Diaspora Level: 20

Representation of Contemporary/Continental African Diaspora: Nationals and Members within the Five Regions in Africa: 0

Notes:

The AU defers determination of Membership in a Member State to its 54 Member States. Currently, Member States' Diaspora and Regional Economic Communities' Diaspora policies and outreach cover only Contemporary/Continental African Diaspora Stakeholders.

By virtue of citizenship in Member States, Continental African Diaspora stakeholders are generally eligible for citizenship entitlements, including National and Regional Passports, and the eventual African Passport by 2018 based on the timeline of Agenda 2063.

An increasing number of AU Member States have Diaspora policies and programs under the Ministry of Foreign Affairs. Some countries have Diaspora Committees at the legislative branch. A best practice at Regional level is ECOWAS and its Diaspora with two Conferences held.

Member States' / Regional engagements of their Diaspora Stakeholders have structural coherence. A growing number are granting Dual Citizenship (latest Zambian Diaspora in January 2016) and Voting Rights (latest Kenyan Diaspora voting in 2017.) It is feasible to understand and base methods of representation on the legal and political context of Continental Africa Diaspora.

The AU Executive Council is yet to determine how non-citizens and how people of African descent living outside Africa and not members of any of the Five Regions of the African Union can be legal representatives of the African Union's organs and vote in the processes. The Constitution has not been amended and ratified to provide clear guidance.

The recent clarification that Haiti is not a Member State of the AU but has an "Observer Status" adds to the uncertainty. ECOSOCC Constitution has provision for "Observer Status." Therefore, the legal and political context for the creation of the Sixth Region for all people of African descent living outside Africa, which will cover Historical Diaspora, needs to be determined by the AU.

Historical Diaspora from Caribbean Nations can elect to participate in the Diaspora policies by their governments. Some of the policies, such as Remittances, Skills Transfer, Investments to build their nations and region, are similar to the AU Diaspora Legacy Programs.

Therefore, informed understanding and targeted policies for the three distinguishable groups of Continental African and Historical Diasporas will enable the African Union to make sound policies in alignment with Member States Diaspora Policies; provisions for Historical Diaspora where legally and structurally feasible, and other diplomatic relations with the Caribbean nations since they also have Diaspora programs that are similar or identical to the African Union outreach but with different targeted results from their stakeholders.

Entitled Representation Per ECOSOCC Constitution at Ex-Officio capacity, nominated by the Commission based on special considerations, in consultation with Member States: 6

Representation: 0

Vacancy: 6

Note: There is no indication of Representation in the current Membership of the ECOSOC Second General Assembly.

ECOSOCC representation.JPG


Out of 152 required representation at the ECOSOCC General Assembly, there are 63 Representatives and 89 vacancies. Representation is 41%. ECOSOCC Representation is under-presented by 59%.



How AU's lack of Coherence, Targeted Policies and Practical Focus to engage Continental African Diaspora results in missed Annual Billions of Dollars while AU depends on aid.

The African Union Diaspora Legacy Programs' Cash Cow and Cash Inflow.
African Institute of Remittances (AIR) and Diaspora Sovereign Bonds.

The AU and organs have spent considerable time and effort, mostly with foreign donors/partners, on the implementation of AIR.

According to the AU, remittances are now a bigger source of Africa's capital inflows compared to Foreign Direct Investment or Overseas Development Assistance. The funds provide safety nets for families and keep poorer nations from collapsing into social and financial abyss. The focus of the article goes beyond the monies to families and friends to the potential revenues from reduced fees of sending the money. The revenues can be used for poverty reduction programs in Africa and other sustainable developments. The benefits, then, of using AIR, managed and owned by Africans, cannot be negated or opposed by non-mischief making and non-conflict of interest Africans.

The International Fund for Agricultural Development (IFAD) estimates that, on a country-by-country average, remittances represent 5 per cent of GDP. If one looks at the percentage of a country's GDP that is generated by Diaspora remittance, the poorest and relatively smaller countries show the highest dependence on foreign transfers, for examples: Eritrea (38%), Cape Verde (34%), Liberia (26%) and Burundi (23%). Somalia receives approximately $1 billion worth of diaspora transfers every year but it is not listed on percentage terms because its GDP is unclear.

Zimbabwean Finance Minister Patrick Chinamasa, in his 2016 National Budget, projected that Diasporan remittances would contribute about $960 million in the fiscal year, adding that a National Diaspora Policy was in the offing. "Zimbabweans are all over the world and they have been playing a sterling role in ensuring the economy does not collapse through their remittances which are almost $1 billion, which is 25% of the $4 billion 2016 National Budget announced'' Minister Chinamasa said.

Researchers admitted that the record of $62 billion US dollars in 2013 is a conservative estimate and maybe half the amount since not all sources of sending money was factored in.

Adams Bodomo, a Hong-Kong based Ghanaian academic researching remittances, indicated that about 75% of all transfers are informal and, therefore, impossible to track. "If we add all that [informal transfers] in, the diaspora remittances would be bigger by a factor" bringing the actual figure anywhere between $120 billion and 160 billion.

The cost of sending money to Africa range from 5-12%. If a very low estimate of 2% - 3% is used on $100 billion annual remittances, that is 2-3 billion dollars to the AU to financing much needed developments.

However, after more than four years, the curious or lamentable dimensions to AIR are that Contemporary/Continental African Diaspora Stakeholders, on whom the sustainability of AIR depends, remain largely clueless while old and new businesses are engaging Contemporary/Continental African Diaspora to send remittances using their services.

This month, a headline blared, Ghanaian diaspora embrace MTN Mobile Money sending with WorldRemit. World Remit was established in 2010. USAID and Western Union partner on another Diaspora program, posing a conflict with AIR since Western Union competes in maintaining and expanding its market niche and growth with the Continental African Diaspora.


In 2014, at a meeting titled, " African Institute for Remittances (AIR) Project Bank Executed Trust Fund (BETF - TF071207) and based on the Minutes of the 5 th Conference of AU Ministers of Finance (CAMF) 21 st - 28 th March 2012, Addis Ababa, Ethiopia, the followings items were noted in points 13 and 15.
13: While the top priority should remain the reduction of remittance costs, the following priority areas were also suggested: the impact of remittances on M/S' balance of payments; financial sector development (including the financing of rural development); the establishment of a Continental database; Continental advocacy; Diaspora involvement, intra-Africa vs. outgoing remittances; remittances in-kind; intra-operability; the AIR mandate/legitimacy to work on the remittances (as it is actually individual's money); dual nationality; existing best practices; infrastructure building and involvement of the RECs. Beyond AIR, the aforementioned areas should also be addressed within Africa's development agenda.

15: The international issue of African remittances warrants an exclusive focus by an African-led, African-owned and Africa-based institute with a sole focus on this matter.
At the 24 th Ordinary Session of AU January 2014, Addis Ababa, Ethiopia, Kenya's offer to host AIR was adopted by the AU. On October 22, 2015, Dr Mustapha S. Kaloko, the AUC Commissioner for Social Affairs AUC, hosted the flag hoisting ceremony to launch the Operationalization of AIR in Nairobi, Kenya. Mr Amadou Cisse is AIR's Interim Executive Director of AIR.

Based on a random survey of 521 stakeholders after the AU ECOSOCC Global Africa Diaspora Stakeholder Convention on Nov. 19-22, only 8% had an idea of the purpose of AIR and 15% were misinformed by generated controversies. The rest of the respondents were clueless.

Will it not make good sense for the AU and AIR officials to start engaging those whose monies will make AIR functional? The ECOSOCC Social and Economic Affairs Cluster have valuable roles to play in the domestic mobilizing of the resources by engaging Continental Africa Diaspora.

Each delay means billions are lost in potential revenues.

Engaging Continental African Diaspora also improves another outlet for cash-strapped Africa to gain access to financing from their Diaspora nationals. The alternative financing has been successfully tried and tested by two countries with industrious diaspora populations, Israel and India. Both nations demonstrated significant success issuing Diaspora bonds and raised $32 billion and $11.3 billion respectively.

Diaspora bonds are a form of government debt that targets members of the national community abroad, tapping into a sovereign capital market beyond international investors, foreign direct investment, or foreign loans. It is an attractive source of financing for long-term projects and alleviation of poverty. The success of banking on the "patriotic" Diaspora, when investors are often not keen to accept returns lower than they might get on the open market and the compromising conditions of foreign loans, is a unique feature of the Diaspora Bond.

However, Member States would be presumptuous and mistaken to expect automatic embrace without meaningful changes in the way they relate to the Continental African Diaspora populations whose members are counted on to buy the bonds.

In recent years, a number of Member States have issued Diaspora Bonds with limited success, most notably Kenya and Ethiopia. Major drawbacks are the lack of awareness and reciprocal relationships. Nigeria just increased the level of the Diaspora Bond.

Another suggestion to increase results and overcome hesitancy to individual government is through Diaspora bonds at the Regional levels with Member States pooling their efforts and launching Diaspora Bonds through an African-led institution.

Invariably, for success to happen and to be sustained, effective working relations with Continental African Diaspora, representation at the AU ECOSOCC, collaboration with the pertinent Clusters and Regional Representatives can be instrumental in improving awareness of the products and reducing barriers to outcomes.

FIHANKRA CONTROVERSY: A CAUTIONARY TALE ABOUT REPATRIATION TO AFRICA AND DEVELOPMENT MODELS BASED ON BLACK CAPITALISM

In 1994, I was living in Chicago down the street from the Hebrew Israelite community. I used to frequent their Original Soul Vegetarian Restaurant. As documented in my book, From Yale to Rastafari: Letters to My Mom 1995-1998, I had just left Yale University the previous year and was seeking my African roots. At this time, there was great excitement over the Fihankra movement. News was being spread that Ghana was giving free land to African Americans! The first step in getting this free land was registering with a group called Fihankra. This is how I first got involved with a serious repatriation to Africa effort. And that’s pretty much where my involvement with Fihankra began and ended. Something didn’t seem right. The more information I got, the more skeptical I became. As a young, gifted black man with absolutely no money, I was looking for an opportunity to go to Africa and serve - lend my youthful energy and education to building Africa. I was only 23 years old and I had no money, no business, no real skills. All I had was a desire to ESCAPE America and the Pan African dream to unite with my people to make the African continent a world power. The more I looked into Fihankra, however, the more I realized this was not a movement to take young people and give them opportunities in Africa. This was a plan to find wealthy black people to invest in a a real estate program. That’s not exactly what I thought of when I heard the words, “Right of Return”. Why did I have to PAY to go back to the place where my ancestors were taken from? How were the vast majority of people who wanted to repatriate going to be able to afford this????

Meanwhile, at the same time, I became more and more involved with the Rastafari movement and learned about the Shashemane Land Grant that Emperor Haile Selassie gave to African Americans through the Ethiopian World Federation (EWF). I would eventually become a very active member of the EWF and traveled to Ethiopia in 2003 where I spent a year there, much of it on the Shashemane Land Grant. There I saw firsthand the problems and issues concerning Repatriation while also consulting with the government of Ethiopia and the African Union to resolve various immigration and citizenship issues.

On the other side of the continent, in Ghana, the Fihankra land grant was experiencing similar problems. Below are firsthand accounts of what happens when ECONOMIC DEVELOPMENT is placed before the HUMAN DEVELOPMENT. To avoid this, the Lineage Restoration Movement has a development model based on restoring the ancestral bonds of the families that were separated through the criminal European trans Atlantic trafficking and enslavement of people from the African Continent. The Lineage Restoration Model is based on

1) identifying your paternal and maternal lineage

2) building a relationship with the members of your ancestral lineage across the Atlantic in their homeland - re-learning your ancestral language and culture that was taken during slavery and organizing welcome home rituals in those villages.

3) helping the communities to determine their OWN development needs first and assisting in those projects

4) build the village first, then repatriate as family that contributed its share to building the village.

This is the development model that the Balanta B’urassa History and Genealogy Society in America has successfully pursued with both the people and government in Guinea Bissau.

HERE IS WHAT CAN HAPPEN WHEN THIS MODEL IS NOT USED:

Black Star Lions

“October 24, 2013 

THE FIHANKRA CONTROVERSY

Many people have heard about Fihankra over the years and while many have come forward to ‘claim’ their free land, many do not really understand what Fihankra is.

The term Fihankra is a Ghanaian expression which means, “When leaving home no goodbyes were said.” Fihankra, then, refers to all Africans from the Diaspora who are descended from the trans-Atlantic slave trade. That comprises some maybe 300 million people. That’s just a guess cause these figures could never be totally accurate.

The skin and stool of Fihankra are physical symbols which were purified to represent the apology given by several Ghanaian elders and the welcoming home of those of us out in the Diaspora. This was done in December 1994. It was considered an historic event and everyone was optimistic about the possibilities of joining the entire African family once again.

The land that many people refer to as Fihankra is really called Yeafa Ogyamu and is only one of many parcels of land that were offered, but few know this fact. The land was a ‘gift’ of the Akwamu people to represent their own personal atonement (for slavery). The land was given for all Fihankra, in other words, all of us descendants of the slave trade. The original people who made up the group given the land promised development of many kinds, including, fire station, police station, health facility, schools and various businesses. One family eventually usurped not only the land, but the stool and skin of Fihankra. They call(ed) themselves the 'royal family'. How this happened is not really clear. Some of the key figures are no longer on this plane and cannot answer that question. The man/chief’s name is down on the indenture as CUSTODIAN for the skin and stool of Fihankra.

What should have been an opportunity for African descendants to resettle became a personal business enterprise for one man. The fee for land started at $3,500 for one plot (100ft x 100ft), at a time when plots were leasing for approximately $200 with a 50 year lease. I never really understood whether a person who chose to have 5 plots would have to pay $17,500 or the same $3,500. With stool land the general procedure for acquiring land is to negotiate with the family chief, agree on a price, have the land surveyed and have the land registered. Then you are expected to pay a ‘land rent’ every year, half of which goes to the district assembly and half goes to the chief. This process ensures that each succeeding chief benefits a bit from the original land deal. For further clarity and information, the land rent today, after years of increases, on 6 plots of land is just under $100. On a new acquisition, the land rent on the same six plots may be only $30 (this is every year until an increase).

Back to Fihankra……. Around 2003 the tactics changed. The usurper decided that it would be better to charge a yearly fee and started with a fee of $100. By 2004 it was $200/year and recently we were told the fee was $800/year. The original usurper died in 2008 and many thought that the politics would change and become more favourable and just. Well, it seems we were completely wrong. Now the 'royal family' has decided that this land is their private property and that any others who try to do anything on the land are trespassers!!!!!!! The 'royal family' claims that one of the original custodian’s sons is the heir and successor and therefore it is his land. The landlord (an Akwamu chief) is not in accord with any of this and is working to remove that 'royal family' from the land.

We live ½ mile down the road from Yeafa Ogyamu so we have seen quite a bit in the almost 12 years we have lived here. Some of the things that we have witnessed include:

People pay their yearly fee to secure their plot. When they arrive to commence building they are told they have to pay infrastructure fees (which we are told are $800 per room) and until that is paid they cannot build.

People are not being showed where their plots are unless they pay the infrastructure fee.

The security guards are not allowing workers on the site, blocking any building from going on.

One sister sent close to $20,000 to have her home built and when she arrived all she found was a load of sand, and didn’t get her money back.

One sister paid for 3 plots for herself and 3 plots for her son (at the time the yearly rate was $200). When her husband went to clear the land some men came at him with rifles and told him he had no business to build there.

One man paid an astronomical amount for an incomplete building and when he wasn’t paying the agreed monthly payments, one of the 'royals' broke in and took all his legal documents.

Despite collecting yearly fees the land rent was left unpaid for several years until one land ‘owner’ paid all and started to keep decent records.

One family has been taken to court for trespassing, even though they are land owners. They wanted to have a small business and it was opposed by ……. Yes, you guessed it, the 'royal family’.

Many people have been turned away from acquiring land based on the fact that the ‘royal family’ feels they don’t have “what it takes” to build. Who are they to judge?

After about 18 years of having the land, the only people who are living at Yeafa Ogyamu other than the ‘royal family’ are two families. Another brother has stayed there for a length of 6 months so is basically living there also. After 18 years I would hope that a lot more families would have taken advantage of this gift from the chiefs. From what we know, we have close to or more than 10,000 people living in Ghana from the Caribbean and the united States. 10,000 people and only 8 people are living at Yeafa Ogyamu.

We have tried to stay out of this issue but it’s difficult to watch such injustice occurring and not react. The question is, what to do and how to 'free' the land so that interested parties can come and develop their homes and/or businesses. We are putting this out so that the truth can be known and the correct people come forward to assist in this freeing. Many blessings.”

TESTIMONY OF KHAMEELAH SHABAZZ

“I became involved with Fihankra in 2006 after attending a lecture at Savior's Day in Chicago. The lecture was conducted by Saladdin Ali and Minister Akbar Muhammad. We were presented information and given a professional video marketing Fihankra by telling us we would receive a free plot of land and all we had to do was compete the paperwork and pay $500. I mailed in the $500 plus my last payment for the tour. We were taken to the land, met the chiefs and even toured several bate houses on the property. Now I realize Fihankra was orchestrated. The day after visiting Fihankra I met a young man and his wife who repatriated to Ghana. Right out of the clear blue he came up to me and asked what was I doing in Ghana. I told him about claiming land in Fihankra. He told me not to get involved with that land because there were toooooo many disputes with the chiefs. I took his advice. In 2012 while in Ghana a Ghanaian told me Mr Akpam had been killed and several years ago two other people were murdered and buried on that land. I made the mistake of buying a dream without requesting the business plan and verifying the validity of the project. I still have my papers to the plot of land.”

See the Fihankra Constitution Below

Chieftaincy minister sued over Akwamufie 'chieftaincy tussle'

October 13, 2014 By Myjoyonline.com|Nathan Gadugah

Fihankra 1.jpg

“The Chieftaincy Minister has defended a decision to arrest some persons claiming to be Chief and Queen mother of an African-American community at Akwamufie in the Eastern Region.

Dr Seidu Danaa said the arrest of the claimants to the Fihankra Stool is to restore lasting peace to the area and to ensure that "the right thing is done."

Goloi Osakwe Akpan and his mother, Majewa Akpan were arrested over the weekend for allegedly creating a near chieftaincy crisis in the area.

A third suspect, said to be the leader of a group of African- Americans who settled in Akwamufie in the Eastern region in 1997 was also arrested but granted bail.

Erna Terefe-Kasa, an aunt to one of the arrested persons has challenged the basis for the arrest of the three.

She told Joy News' Dzifa Bampoh the suspects were arrested for holding themselves out as chiefs, something they never did.

She explained her nephew's father had been enstooled as chief in 1997 but after he died the nephew became the "custodian of the stool and skin."

She said at no point did her nephew call himself chief of the area.

Erna Terefe-Kasa has filed a suit against the Minister of Chieftaincy as well as the Attorney General, seeking justice for what she says is the bad treatment being meted out to her family.

But the Chieftaincy Minister told Joy News the conduct of the suspects is reprehensible and if action is not taken the situation could take a turn to the worse.

Dr Danaa told Joy News nobody can hold himself out as chief "when you are not qualified to do so."

He said "if you acquire land, that is good but acquiring a land does not give you a right to be a chief."

According to him, the names as given by Osakwe Akpan and his mother Majewa Akpan are not recognised in the register of chiefs.

The decision to arrest the three is to bring peace to the area, he insisted.”

Fihankra fraud poster.jpg

UNDERSTANDING THE REPARATIONS AND REPATRIATION CONTEXT IN GHANA

According to Toward Reparations Policy In Ghana A study of the Reparations Movement in Ghana, West Africa:

“On Thursday, August 12, 1999 representatives of African descent from Cote d’Ivoire, Namibia, Ghana, Togo, Benin, Nigeria, Jamaica, Tanzania, Zamibia, USA, the United Kingdom, South Africa, Barbados, Martinique, and Guadaloupe gathered in Accra, Ghana at the W. E.B. DuBois Memorial Center for Pan-African Culture for the International Reparations and Repatriation Truth Commission Conference under the leadership of the Afrikan World Reparations and Repatriation Truth Commission (AWRRTC). As a follow-up to this historic meeting, the delegates crafted a declaration that not only called for the immediate cancellation of international debt owed by Africa and all countries of African slave descendants and $777 trillion principal with interest per annum from the nations of Western Europe, the Americas, and institutions who benefited from the Trans-Atlantic Slave Trade and Colonialism, but also for the unconditional right of return to Africa for the direct descendants of enslaved Africans. In addition, the declaration noted, “the root causes of Africa’s problems today are the enslavement and colonization of Africa and of African people over a 400 year period-through the Trans-Atlantic Slave Trade and the illegal occupation by European nations on Africa’s sovereign soil. As a follow-up to the 1999 conference, AWRRTC organized a second International Reparations and Repatriation Truth Commission Conference, held July 28-30 2000 in Accra, Ghana, during which delegates drafted an action plan aimed at bringing the tenants central to the 1999 declaration to fruition. The plan called for African nations and those nations of African descent in the Diaspora to immediately stop debt-servicing payments, and “rightfully use debt servicing capital for domestic development” , it also called for the Organisation of African Unity (OAU) to allocate four observer seats to representatives of the African Diaspora of North, Central, South America, and the Caribbean regions. The action plan also supported Ghana’s Immigration Bill #573, which would give descendants of those enslaved the right of abode in Ghana, and encouraged Ghana’s traditional rulers to set aside lands for resettlement and development in agriculture, small scale industry, and education.

In 2007, Ghana launched The Joseph Project. At the time, New African magazine reported,

“Diasporan Africans who have yearned for years to return to the motherland but have not been able to do so, can now have no more excuses to stay back. An innovative programme launched by the Ghanaian government, called The Joseph Project, is all that they need to return home. . . . The Ministry of Tourism and Diasporan Relations (MOTDR) has drawn an elaborate plan to establish Ghana as the homeland for Africans in the Diaspora via an innovative Joseph Project, which takes inspiration from the story of the Biblical Joseph who was sold into slavery in Egypt by his brethren but triumphed over all adversity. . . . . The Joseph Project was initiated by the Ghanaian government through the Ministry of Tourism and Diasporan Relations in collaboration with the United Nations World Tourism Organisation (UNWTO) and the United Nations Educational, Cultural and Scientific Organisation (UNESCO). The project is being jointly funded by the Ghana government, UNWTO and UNESCO. . . . Its benefits are enormous, as it seeks to turn a painful past into a World Heritage Property and a major tourism attraction. Statistics show that colonial castles and forts are one of the most sought after tourism attractions in the world. The Joseph Project is basically Ghana's lead role in re-enacting the sordid chattel slavery and its devastating effects on mankind, especially Africans at home and in the Diaspora. . . . The Joseph Project is, therefore, Ghana's invitation to Diasporan Africans to return to the land of their ancestors.

The project was formally launched on 15 February 2007 during a meeting of African tourism ministers in Accra. It is the lead activity in the Akwaaba, Anyemi programme of the Ghana Ministry of Tourism and Diasporan Relations (MOTDR) aimed at reestablishing the African nation as one for all Africans--whether living at home or in the Diaspora. . . . In 1994, the government of President Jerry Rawlings took these ideas a step further when it launched "Emancipation Day" to be celebrated annually in commemoration of the day when African slaves in the Americas, the Caribbean and elsewhere got their freedom. . . . The Ghana government, therefore, intends to use the 50th anniversary of the country's independence, which coincides with the 200th anniversary of the abolition of the Transatlantic Slave Trade, to celebrate "African excellence. . . .”

I went to Ghana in 2007 as part of the Joseph Project and a journalist covering the African Union Grand Debate on the United States of Africa. I, along with many others, criticized the approach by Ghana and other government to make “heritage tourism” the primary aim of engaging the African Diaspora because essentially, it was only a marketing plan aimed at attracting tourism revenue and business development, and was not primarily concerned with issues of justice, human development, and the needs of the African Diaspora for physical, emotional, psychological and spiritual repair. They were attempting to make money the priority.

Ras Nathaniel African Union ID.JPG
AU Grand Debate.jpg

It is from these two experiences, in Shasheman, Ethiopia, and with Fihankra in Ghana that the inspiration to develop a new model of development was born, and that model has now crystallized in the Lineage Restoration Movement. I saw firsthand what happens when the African Diaspora attempts to create new “ethnic groups” such as Rastafari and Fihankra, and is seen as foreigners moving into a new territory. As an alternative to that model, the Lineage Restoration Movement aims to re-integrate and assimilate the African Diaspora back into the community from which it ACTUALLY came from and once integrated, the village and the repatriate development becomes one and the same. If you would like to learn more about this approach, go to

LINEAGE RESTORATION MOVEMENT

and sign the petition

LRM logo (2).jpg

A BABY NAMED FIHANKRA

by Curtis Murphy

I have been living in Ghana since 2011 and I will say The Government of Ghana have been fair and given AA’s and all Africans who are antecedents of Africans placed into enslavement, an opportunity to be treated as any other African with the same rights as Ghanain citizens... None of you who have posted in this thread from the very person who made the initial post down to the last person that posted before me understand the Ghana/African culture in regards to ones existence. You don't understand the significance of a Ghana Stool. Without an in depth understanding of a stool you are definitely in the "Obuni/foreigner" state of mind. For the past 23 years Ghana government has given us the opportunity to be full equal citizens thru the traditional system, sense and culture that every other African citizen has, but the actions and routes AA’s have taken is the non African based cultural approach to living and being accepted as a citizen here in Ghana. Let me give you an analogy story, to help you understand. A child name "Fihankra" was born/created 23 years ago from the genes of all Africans taken into slavery in the Diaspora.. The Baby, Fihankra was the inheritor of 32,000 acres of land with the rights of every other citizen of Ghana.. The child, was abandoned on the Ghana streets, by the father and the mother could not be found. Some UN-scrupled people visiting Ghana from American, AA's, recognized the child and the potential profits that could be had from "Baby Fihankra" and so they took/kidnapped, the child off the streets and claimed to be Baby Fihankra, parents. They told lies about them being the birth parents of the child. The lie was told, over and over again, to all the AA's that visited Ghana and so AA's believed the story of the kidnappers and not knowing the truth paid little to no attention to "Baby Fihankra" and didn't know the child, their genetic relative was being mistreated, abused, and exploited. In 2011 some AA's genetic researchers discovered the truth about Baby Fihankra and began to fight for the child's freedom from the Kidnappers. In 2014, The Ghana government through official document recognized what had happened and ordered the child to be reunited with her genetic parents and people. The kidnappers refused and were arrested and the child was took away from them. Now the child Fihankra is 23 years old and wish to unite with her genetic family but her genetic family is ignoring her still. Karma came in and a robber murdered the kidnappers, trying to rob them of the money they had scammed by selling Fihankra’s land. The End of this analogy story.  We should not expect to be treated as Africans but not come through the traditional African way, that of the "African Stool "? Ghana government is proud of their culture but seem to not explain it to us, AA’s very well, one has to experience it, it seems. The Ghana Government, the Government that was in existence when our ancestors were taken away, That government is still in existence and offer our way back to Africa under the same conditions in which our ancestors left, with land and rights.. We belonged to the Fihankra "Stool and Skin", our ancestors belonged to a "STOOL OR A SKIN" when they left and we are offered the same method of return based on an African identity through a Traditional Stool or skin, but we have neglected to accept it. Those of you who want to be in the know please google the "Tabom People" in Ghana. They were the Africans that repatriated from Brazil in the early part of the 19th century. They were given full rights of Ghana citizens, which included land and the right to vote, and a seat for representation in the government. We can talk more but I have to leave for now, I can say with certainty that when Bill Clinton was president he made an offer to former Ghana president, Jerry Rwalings that if Ghana would deny AA's citizenship, the USA government would pay for the construction of Ghana infrastructure of highways. Thus, Ghana has the " George Bush" Highway named for George Bush to furnish the funds to finish the deal Clinton had started. End of story!!!! Except The Repatriation Movement is threat to US National Security. America will not know what to do if all the descendants of the people they enslaved was to leave. Make a list of all the jobs White Americans have off of the presence of African/Black people in the US...!!! United State Government is proactive... and they noisey as hell...

BBHAGSIA 1st Annual Meeting

“Let us go on with our work and talk a little to the comrades about some principles of our Party and of our struggle. . . . Let us consider, for example, a football team, which is made up of various individuals, eleven persons. Each person has his specific work to do when the football team is playing. The persons differ from each other: different temperaments; often different education, some cannot read or write, others are doctors or engineers; different religion, one might be Moslem, another Catholic, etc. They may even act differently on the political plane, none might be of one Party, another of another. One might be for the status quo, another might be for the opposition. That is ,persons different from each other, each one feeling different from the other, but in the same football team. And if this football team, when it comes to playing, does not succeed in achieving a unity of all its elements, it will not be a football team. Each one can preserve his personality, his ideas, his religion, his personal problems, even a little of his style of play, but they must all obey one thing: they must act together to score goals against any opponent with whom they are playing, that is act around this specific aim of scoring the maximum number of goals against the opponent. They have to form a unity. If they do not do this, there is no football team, there is nothing. This to show you a clear example of unity.”

- Amilcar Cabral, The Weapon of Theory

Unity 2.jpg

This is a reminder that tonight at 6 PM CST is our 1st Annual Meeting. Siphiwe Baleka is inviting you to a scheduled Zoom meeting.

Topic: BBHAGSIA Mandatory Members Meeting

Time: Oct 14, 2020 06:00 PM Central Time (US and Canada)

Join Zoom Meeting

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Meeting ID: 859 8891 7396

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Meeting ID: 859 8891 7396

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BBGHSIA Meeting Agenda

Date 14 Oct 2020

Time 6:00 pm CST

Type of Meeting: BBGHSIA Formal Business Meeting

Meeting Facilitator: President

Invitees: All BBGHSIA Members

I.      Call to order

a)      Binham Brassa Pledge

II.      Officers Roll Call

III.      Approval of minutes from last meeting

IV.      Committee Reports

a)      Membership Committee

b)      Language Preservation Committee

c)      Fundraising Committee

d)      Aid Committee

e)      History committee

V.      Executive Board Reports

a)      Treasures Report

b)      Secretaries Report

c)      Vice-Presidents Report

d)      President Reports

VI.      Open Issues

f)       Committee volunteers/chairs

g)      Fundraising projects

h)      Family narratives

i)       Certificates/ Directory

j)       Gambia Balanta Students Association

k)      Balanta Peoples Union

VII.      New business

a)       World Africa Day 2021

b)      Additional Fundraisers

a)      T-Shirts other BBGHSIA Apparel 

c)       2nd annual Balanta Day 2021

VIII.      Balanta Anthem

IX.      Formal Adjournment

X.      Virtual Fellowship