Wednesday, March 12, 2014

Caribbean Nations Sue for Slavery Reparations


The British human rights firm Leigh Day has been hired by the Caribbean Community consortium to pursue slavery reparations and apologies from Britain, France and the Netherlands. The suit claims that these nations are responsible for lingering harms which can be attributed to the slave trade.

We congratulate the Caribbean Community and Leigh Day for pursuit of justice regarding human trafficking, slavery, economic and social injustices inflicted on the Caribbean people. 

Leigh Day is a specialist law firm with some of Britian's leading attorneys in personal injury, product liability, clinical negligence, employment and discrimination, international and human rights teams. Unlike other law firms, Leigh Day acts exclusively for claimants who've been injured or treated unlawfully by others.

Leigh Day represents the rights of people and the environment in a world of multi-national organisations and global responsibility. Over the last twenty years, Leigh Day has been involved in ground-breaking cases involving the claims of foreign nationals against UK-based multinational companies (MNCs) and government departments and the rights of British nationals abroad. These have included among others:

  • Claims for Kenyan victims of torture at the hands of British officials during the Mau Mau independence movement in the 1950s and 1960s (Mutua & Ors v Foreign Commonwealth Office)
  • The UK’s largest-ever group action on behalf of 30,000 Ivorians affected by toxic waste dumping in the Ivory Coast (Motto & Ors v Trafigura)
  • Claims for thousands of South African mine workers who developed lung diseases following their exposure to asbestos and silica dust in the mines (Lubbe & Ors v Cape Plc; Chandler v Cape plc; Alpheus Zonisile Blom v Anglo American South Africa Limited (SA); Flatela Vava & Ors v Anglo American South Africa Limited (UK))
  • Claims against African Barrick Gold on behalf of Tanzanian villagers for deaths and injuries allegedly caused by the use of excessive force by mine security and police
  • Claims against the British Government for complicity in extraordinary rendition and torture in the war on terror (Binyam Mohammed v The Security Services & Ors; Abul-Hakim Belhadj & Or v Rt Hon Jack Straw MP and Ors)
  • Claims on behalf of Iraqi and Afghan nationals detained and abused by British Forces in Iraq and Afghanistan (Muhanna & Ors v The Ministry of Defence; Dawood Mousa Al-Maliki on behalf of the Estate of Mr Baha Mousa(deceased) and Others v The Ministry of Defence; Serdar Mohammed v The Ministry of Defence)

  • Leigh Day: Human Rights Law Firm 
    More information about Leigh Day is available at the website

    Leigh Day says, "The common strand to these claims has been the pursuit of the rights of the individual against corporate and governmental bodies. The David vs Goliath battles are our forte and are why we are widely seen as the leading firm in this country in this type of case."

    It is a legal victory for all people that the Caribbean nations united to sue for slavery reparations by Leigh Day, a law firm that is accomplished in pursuing justice under International Law. Dr. Martin Luther King, Jr. said that an injustice anywhere is an injustice everywhere. Empty-handed apologies for atrocious crimes against humanity are necessarily insincere and unacceptable, whether in the Caribbean, America, or elsewhere. Paying reparations would be good for all nations that engaged in slavery. Reparations would finally "clear the air." See an excerpt below from an article by MaryLovesJustice published in November 2013:

    "12 Years a Slave: A Case for Reparations"
    Some cannot rest easy living among people who were treated so horribly and who are yet victimized by economic depression, prison slavery and weekly lynchings. Therefore, they say "I felt threatened" when they kill us, and even liberal whites understand. For they, too, have felt that unreasonable fear. This explains why liberals tolerate oppressive laws like Stop & Frisk, and juries comprised of otherwise decent people release murderous police officers and ordinary white citizens who kill innocent, unarmed blacks. (Continue reading 
    http://freespeakblog.blogspot.com/2013/11/12-years-slave-case-for-reparations.html )

    It has long been the practice to compensate people who were subjected to crimes against humanity. Consider reparations payouts illustrated on the chart below:



    European nations do not embrace the opportunity to pay reparations. The Guardian reports that David Cameron has made clear he is ready to pull the UK out of the European convention on human rights if he believes it is necessary to keep Britain safe. This assertion was supposedly issued in connection with Britain's desire to deport people who are perceived as being a threat, but the Caribbean Community's lawsuit is probably a larger impetus.

    "European Nations Attempt to Evade Reparations Lawsuit, But Caricom May Gain Political Leverage" ~ David Standard, the head of media relations at Leigh Day, said, “This was one of the most heinous periods of mankind. France, the Netherlands, Britain all massively benefited through the course of this time. It was built on the backs of the slavery trade. While one fully understands that these countries are not doing as well as they once were, at the same time, in the end if you have a debt due, you have a debt due."

    http://atlantablackstar.com/2014/01/13/europe-nations-attempt-evade-reparations-lawsuit-caricom-may-gain-political-leverage/

    Congratulations, Caribbean nations and Leigh Day!
    Congratulations to defendants in the lawsuit also. They have an opportunity before them to apply corrective measures to modern hardships caused by historic wrongs. Please listen to programs on "Human Rights Demand," a blogtalkradio channel by MaryLovesJustice. Program schedule:
    Human Rights Demand Channel ~ Blogtalkradio
    http://freespeakblog.blogspot.com/2014/02/human-rights-demand-channel.html   

    First paragraph repeated:
    The British human rights firm Leigh Day has been hired by the Caribbean Community consortium to pursue slavery reparations and apologies from Britain, France and the Netherlands. The suit claims that these nations are responsible for lingering harms which can be attributed to the slave trade. (Five(5) Links)
    Call or write with information about legal victories you wish to highlight
    MaryLovesJustice@gmail.com or (678) 531.0262.
    Messages will be responded to within 24 hours, or please call/write again.
    I endure First Amendment violations to prevent disclosure about the
    Wrongful Death of Larry Neal.com
    Thanks.

4 comments:

  1. See more information at PoliticalBlindspot.com
    http://politicalblindspot.com/caribbean-nations-file-lawsuit-demanding-slavery-reparations/

    ReplyDelete
  2. Leigh Day: Human Rights Law Firm
    More information about Leigh Day is available at the website
    http://www.leighday.co.uk/International-and-group-claims

    (photo)

    Leigh Day says, "The common strand to these claims has been the pursuit of the rights of the individual against corporate and governmental bodies. The David vs Goliath battles are our forte and are why we are widely seen as the leading firm in this country in this type of case."

    It is a legal victory for all people that the Caribbean nations united to sue for slavery reparations by Leigh Day, a law firm that is accomplished in pursuing justice under International Law. Dr. Martin Luther King, Jr. said that an injustice anywhere is an injustice everywhere. Empty-handed apologies for atrocious crimes against humanity are necessarily insincere and unacceptable, whether in the Caribbean, America, or elsewhere. Paying reparations would be good for all nations that engaged in slavery. Reparations would finally "clear the air." See an excerpt below from an article by MaryLovesJustice published in November 2013:

    "12 Years a Slave: A Case for Reparations"
    Some cannot rest easy living among people who were treated so horribly and who are yet victimized by economic depression, prison slavery and weekly lynchings. Therefore, they say "I felt threatened" when they kill us, and even liberal whites understand. For they, too, have felt that unreasonable fear. This explains why liberals tolerate oppressive laws like Stop & Frisk, and juries comprised of otherwise decent people release murderous police officers and ordinary white citizens who kill innocent, unarmed blacks. (Continue reading
    http://freespeakblog.blogspot.com/2013/11/12-years-slave-case-for-reparations.html )

    It has long been the practice to compensate people who were subjected to crimes against humanity. Consider reparations payouts illustrated on the chart below:

    (Reparations Chart)

    European nations do not embrace the opportunity to pay reparations. The Guardian reports that David Cameron has made clear he is ready to pull the UK out of the European convention on human rights if he believes it is necessary to keep Britain safe. This assertion was supposedly issued in connection with Britain's desire to deport people who are perceived as being a threat, but the Caribbean Community's lawsuit is probably a larger impetus.

    "European Nations Attempt to Evade Reparations Lawsuit, But Caricom May Gain Political Leverage" ~ David Standard, the head of media relations at Leigh Day, said, “This was one of the most heinous periods of mankind. France, the Netherlands, Britain all massively benefited through the course of this time. It was built on the backs of the slavery trade. While one fully understands that these countries are not doing as well as they once were, at the same time, in the end if you have a debt due, you have a debt due."
    http://atlantablackstar.com/2014/01/13/europe-nations-attempt-evade-reparations-lawsuit-caricom-may-gain-political-leverage/

    Congratulations, Caribbean nations and Leigh Day! Congratulations to defendants in the lawsuit also. They have an opportunity before them to apply corrective measures to modern hardships caused by historic wrongs. Please listen to programs on "Human Rights Demand," a blogtalkradio channel by MaryLovesJustice. Program schedule:
    Human Rights Demand Channel ~ Blogtalkradio
    http://freespeakblog.blogspot.com/2014/02/human-rights-demand-channel.html

    First paragraph repeated:
    The British human rights firm Leigh Day has been hired by the Caribbean Community consortium to pursue slavery reparations and apologies from Britain, France and the Netherlands. The suit claims that these nations are responsible for lingering harms which can be attributed to the slave trade. (Seven(7) Links)

    Author's Salutation

    ReplyDelete
  3. I repeated the second half of the article above, because that is where the cyberstalking was concentrated.

    ReplyDelete
  4. Google, how did the votes decrease? We've had six votes for months, and today we have five votes. This is not the Bush/Gore election, stalkers. Keep your dirty hands off my chart.

    ReplyDelete

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