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NEED FOR UK GOVERNMENT ACTION ON SLAVE TRADE LEGACIES

 

Anti-Slavery International welcomes Prime Minister Tony Blair's apology for Britain's role in the Transatlantic Slave Trade (14 March) and calls on the Government take action in order to address the Slave Trade's legacies.

This is an important move forward, but for apology to be effective, it is vital the Government takes steps to address the legacies that continue to affect communities on three continents ,” Aidan McQuade Director of Anti-Slavery International said.

As part of its Bicentenary campaign, the Fight for Freedom 1807-2007, Anti-Slavery International is calling for measures that will increase understanding of the Transatlantic Slave Trade, such as making teaching this period a requirement under the National Curriculum; address the Slave Trade's legacies and make ending contemporary slavery, which affects at least 12 million people worldwide, a priority.

The legacies of the Transatlantic Slave Trade reverberate today in terms of racism and discrimination against the black community, as well as the long term impact it has had in both the development and underdevelopment of communities and countries affected by the trade.

During the Transatlantic Slave Trade, Britain transported and enslaved an estimated 3 million people from Africa.

On 25 March 1807, Britain abolished the Slave Trade. This was not the end of slavery, people could still own other human beings, but it ended the trade from Africa to the British colonies and marked an important step on the path to the total abolition of the Transatlantic Slave Trade and the liberation of those who had been enslaved.

 
NOTES TO EDITORS:
 
  • For further information or to arrange an interview please contact Beth Herzfeld, Anti-Slavery International, 020 7501 8934; (out of hours) 07896 783 297 or email b.herzfeld@antislavery.org
  • For information about the Fight for Freedom 1807-2007 go to www.antislavery.org/2007 For information on slavery today see www.antislavery.org
  • Anti-Slavery International was founded in 1839 by the same abolitionists who led Britain's campaign against the Slave Trade in 1807 and fought for the abolition of slavery in 1833. The charity works for an end to all forms of slavery throughout the world and is the only organisation in the UK working exclusively to end slavery and related abuses.


15 March 2007

NR/2/07