A coalition of African and Caribbean nations has formally demanded a comprehensive apology from former colonial powers for the transatlantic slave trade, a move that has catalysed the Commonwealth into its most significant reckoning with historical injustice in decades. The United Kingdom, under Prime Minister Sir Keir Starmer, has signalled a willingness to lead this reconciliation process, though the path forward remains fraught with legal, financial and moral complexities.
The demand, articulated in a joint statement at the Commonwealth Heads of Government Meeting in Apia, Samoa, calls for an official apology, reparative justice mechanisms and the establishment of a truth commission. The document cites the enduring economic disparities rooted in centuries of forced labour, which stripped the continent of an estimated 12.5 million people and plundered its resources. For Caribbean nations, the legacy is particularly stark: studies by the University of the West Indies estimate that transatlantic slavery cost the region over $70 trillion in today's terms through lost productivity, suppressed growth and systematic destruction of indigenous cultures.
Prime Minister Starmer, in measured remarks to the press, described the demand as “a profound moral issue for our age” and acknowledged that Britain’s wealth was built in part on the exploitation of enslaved people. He stopped short of a full apology but committed to initiating consultations with civil society, historians and affected nations. This places the UK at the centre of a delicate diplomatic dance: balancing the moral imperative of acknowledgment against fears of opening the floodgates to legal claims. The British Crown and state were active participants in the slave trade until its abolition in 1807, with the government compensating slave owners, not the enslaved.
The Commonwealth, an association of 56 largely former British colonies, provides a unique forum for this discussion. Its charter explicitly values human rights and equality, yet the silence on the slave trade has been a glaring omission. Historian Dr. Akala James of the University of London notes that the demand reflects a generational shift: younger leaders in Africa and the Caribbean no longer accept the “moving forward” narrative that has dodged direct accountability. “This is not about guilt but about historical truth and its material consequences,” she says. “Apologies are not ends in themselves but foundations for policy changes that can address ongoing structural racism and poverty.”
However, the response from other former colonial powers, particularly Belgium, France and the Netherlands, has been cautious. The European Union has lobbied for a broader focus on sustainable development rather than reparations, wary of setting a precedent that could strain budgets. The United States, which has never formally apologised for slavery, maintains a close watch given its own domestic reckoning with racial inequality.
Critics within the UK argue that the government should focus on present-day issues like the cost of living crisis and climate change rather than symbolic gestures. Conservative MP Richard Holden called the demand a “diversion from real challenges.” But proponents counter that the two are linked: climate vulnerability in the Caribbean, for instance, is exacerbated by historical underinvestment and extraction.
The coming months will test the sincerity of Starmer’s commitment. A formal apology is low-cost politically but high-stakes emotionally. A truth commission could unearth uncomfortable details about the complicity of British institutions including universities, banks and museums. Reparative justice might involve debt cancellation, climate finance or educational scholarships, which would require significant fiscal resources.
As the Commonwealth secretariat prepares a roadmap for the king’s expected address at next year’s summit, the world watches. This is not merely a reckoning with the past; it is a calibration of how nations face the unfinished business of empire in an era of global inequality. The demand for an apology is a signal: the silence has ended.










