By Rebecca Ekpe
“The transatlantic slave trade… is the greatest crime against humanity ever perpetrated.”
Ghanaian President John Dramani Mahama made the point when he secured a Historic UN Reparations Resolution on Slave Trade Justice in New York elevating the issue beyond history into a moral and legal global concern.

Next on the Reparatory Justice Agenda
Meanwhile, Ghana is moving into the next phase of its reparatory justice agenda, with a high-level global conference scheduled for June in Accra. The event follows Ghana’s success at the United Nations, which led to the adoption of Resolution 250 at the General Assembly, in an achievement in what was described by Ghana’s Minister of Foreign Affairs, Samuel Okudzeto Ablakwa, as a “collective victory”.
Ghana’s President John Dramani Mahama secured the major diplomatic breakthrough after the United Nations General Assembly adopted a landmark UN Reparations Resolution calling for renewed international commitment to justice over the transatlantic slave trade.

The motion, tabled under Ghana’s leadership on March 25, 2026, was passed with 123 votes in favour, marking a significant step in global efforts to address the long-lasting effects of slavery.
Justification for conversation on Reparations
Proponents of the question on reparations often frame it as a distant historical debate, but for Ghanaians, it is both immediate and deeply consequential. It speaks not only to the past, but to present inequalities and future possibilities.

Historical Responsibility and Moral Justice
Historically for Ghana, particularly along its coast, Ghana was a major departure point during the transatlantic slave trade. Sites such as Cape Coast Castle and Elmina Castle stand as enduring reminders of this history. Reparations therefore represent a formal acknowledgment that the exploitation of African people and resources was not incidental, but systemic and devastating. For Ghanaians, this is about restoring dignity and correcting a global historical imbalance. President Mahama believes and understands the magnitude of the issues, framing reparations not as aid, but as a right grounded in justice.
He said, ‘’As the African Union Champion for Reparations, I see this cause not as a plea for charity, but as a demand for justice and restoration.”
Economic Implications for Development
Undoubtedly, the transatlantic slave trade and colonial extraction disrupted Africa’s economic trajectory. Reparations, if pursued meaningfully, could translate into investments in infrastructure, education, healthcare, and technology. Connecting reparations directly to ongoing economic injustice, not just past wrongs, the African Union Champion for Reparations pointed out that the people on the Continent are ‘’tired of people extracting the most they can from us and offering the least in return.” This is not simply compensation, it is a mechanism for development justice. For a Ghanaian citizen, it raises a practical question: what opportunities were lost, and how can they be reclaimed?
Cultural Identity and Global Positioning
In the reparations debate, Ghana has positioned itself as a cultural and spiritual home for the African diaspora, notably through initiatives like the Year of Return. Reparations strengthen this role by deepening connections with descendants of enslaved Africans worldwide. It reinforces Ghana’s leadership in shaping global conversations about identity, memory, and belonging. Currently, there is a Diaspora Affairs, Office of the President (DAOOP), to directly foster stronger ties, promote investment opportunities, and enhance cultural and economic collaboration between Ghana and its diaspora communities.
Political and Diplomatic Influence
The reparations debate is gaining traction globally, championed by bodies such as the African Union and CARICOM. Ghana’s engagement in this movement enhances its diplomatic voice, positioning the country as a moral and intellectual leader on issues of historical justice. “We must demand reparations for the enslavement of our people and the colonisation of our land…’’, Mr. Mahama reiterated by consistently linking slavery and colonialism to resource theft and structural inequality, arguing for a unified demand.
Psychological and Social Impact
Experts point to the fact that beyond economics and politics, reparations address intergenerational trauma. The legacy of slavery and colonialism continues to shape perceptions, inequalities, and societal structures. For Ghanaians, acknowledging this legacy is essential to building confidence, unity, and a clearer national identity. “Ghana wants to… ask the world to recognise the slave trade as the greatest crime against humanity… we’ll continue to push… on reparations.” Quite clearly, President John Mahama has underscored Ghana’s leadership role in the global reparations’ movement.
What Reparations Means Personally
At an individual level, reparations are not about receiving a direct payout. Reparations are about:
Recognition: Affirming that the historical injustices affecting your ancestors matter today.
Opportunity: Creating pathways for better education, jobs, and social systems.
Voice: Being part of a global movement demanding fairness and accountability.
Heritage: Understanding and preserving your place in a shared African and diasporic story.
The Bottom Line
As the Reparations conversations deepen heading to the next level with a High-Level Conference later this year in Accra, Ghana, it is important to understand that Reparations are fundamentally about justice with consequences, and they are not symbolic apologies but tangible change. For Ghana, and for a Ghanaian, the issue is tied to national development, cultural pride, and global equity. Ignoring it risks accepting historical disadvantage as permanent; engaging with it opens the possibility of reshaping the future. On global political dynamics, President Mahama’s Special Envoy for Reparations, Dr. Ekwow Spio-Garbrah posited that “It doesn’t mean anything for the motion itself, but symbolically it does.”, reflecting his view that even opposition to reparations carries political and moral significance. However, more pragmatically, for now conversations about reparations should shift from debate to implementation.






































