A coalition of African and Caribbean nations has formally demanded a full apology and reparatory justice from the United Kingdom for its role in the transatlantic slave trade. The demand, delivered at the Commonwealth Heads of Government Meeting in Samoa, has forced a reluctant UK government to commit to a historical review of its colonial past. For communities in Britain's former industrial heartlands, where the wealth generated by slavery built mills and docks, this is not just a foreign policy issue. It is a reckoning with the foundations of inequality that persist today.
The call for an apology comes as no surprise to historians and activists who have long argued that Britain's economic rise was fuelled by the brutal exploitation of millions. The slave trade generated enormous profits that financed the Industrial Revolution, creating fortunes that endowed institutions, built railways, and established the banking system. In cities like Liverpool, Bristol, and Manchester, the legacy of that era is etched into the architecture. But for working-class communities in these same cities, the benefits of that wealth have long since faded. Today, they face stagnant wages, crumbling public services, and a cost-of-living crisis that feels as cruel as any historical injustice.
Prime Minister Keir Starmer, facing pressure from both Caribbean leaders and domestic campaigners, has stopped short of a full apology. Instead, his government has pledged to conduct a "thorough and honest review" of the UK's historical involvement in slavery. The review will examine the economic and social impact of the trade, including how its profits shaped Britain's regions. For many, this is a token gesture. Critics argue that a review without a commitment to reparations is an evasion of responsibility. But for others, it is a necessary first step.
The demand for reparations is not new. Caribbean nations have repeatedly called for a formal apology and financial compensation, pointing to the ongoing economic disparities rooted in colonial exploitation. The UK's wealth, they argue, was built on the unpaid labour and suffering of African people. The British government has long resisted, fearing a cascade of claims and a bill that could run into hundreds of billions of pounds. But the tide is turning. The recent report by the University of the West Indies estimated that the UK owes over £18 trillion in reparations for slavery. While no government would accept that figure, the moral weight behind it is undeniable.
For British voters, the issue feels remote. But it should not. The scars of slavery are not just in the Caribbean or Africa. They are in the boarded-up shops of former mill towns, in the health inequalities that plague black and minority ethnic communities, and in the persistent wealth gap that sees white households holding ten times the assets of black households. The historical review must connect these dots. It must show how the profits from human cargo built the factories that employed generations of white workers, and how the end of slavery was followed by new forms of exploitation in colonies and at home.
Unions have begun to take notice. The TUC has supported calls for a national conversation about reparatory justice, linking it to broader demands for economic equality. As one trade unionist put it: "The fight for fair wages today is part of the same struggle as the fight for compensation for slavery. Both are about who gets to benefit from the wealth created by workers."
The government's review will be led by a panel of historians and community representatives. It is expected to report within two years. But the clock is ticking. The Commonwealth meeting has exposed the gap between Britain's self-image as a liberal democracy and the reality of its historical crimes. For the nations demanding an apology, the review is a test of sincerity. For the people of Britain's forgotten towns, it is a chance to understand how the past still shapes their present. And for the government, it is a moment to decide whether it will lead or be dragged towards justice.










