By Osmund Agbo
In November 2017, the world watched in utter disbelief, some cringed-worthy footage aired by CNN where dozens of men in detention facilities were being auctioned off for as little as $400 each in Libya. If you think that was a fluke, the crew was also told of the existence of similar auctions taking place at nine other locations in the country.
The victims? People that look like me that belong in the
melanin-rich subset of Africans. The traffickers were our brothers, a shade or
two lighter from the north. But that’s just a tip of the proverbial iceberg.
Slavery is alive and thriving in Africa by Africans.
What if I tell you that the last country in the whole wide world to outlaw slavery is a country in the continent of Africa. Yes, that is Mauritania, in 1981. To put it in perspective, that was some 116 years after the US Congress ratified the 13th amendment which stated that “Neither slavery nor involuntary servitude, except as a punishment for crime whereof the party shall have been duly convicted, shall exist within the United States.”
Now, understand that there is a huge difference between having a
paragraph or two in the statute that says it’s illegal to own slaves and the
actual practice of enforcing it.
For in Libya, Mauritania, and some other North African nations,
setting free our other African brothers and sisters of darker hue commonly
referred to as Haratins is one luxury they just cannot afford. After all, less
melanin in the skin means that one is automatically on top in the value chain.
Mauritania, officially referred to as the Islamic Republic of
Mauritania, is a sovereign state in Northwest Africa. About 90 percent of its
territory is situated in the Sahara. Mauritania is a bridge between the Arab
Maghreb of north Africa and darker-skinned sub-Saharan Africa.
Of its 4.4 million population, about 40% is made up of
indigenous dark-skinned Africans called the Haratins, a pejorative term that
speaks to the dark color of their skin.
But being referred to as such is the least of the problem of one
of the most unfortunate people in the face of this planet. The same people who
in Tunisia and Libya are called Chouachin, Chouachine or Chouchan.
Haratins in Mauritania are considered full property of their
lighter-skinned Arab-Berbers who are their Masters. They don’t own land, live
in poor, segregated communities and are only allowed to work in certain
professions specifically designated for their caste alone, such as rubbish
collection and butchery. They may be bought and sold, rented out and given away
as gifts. Haratins are slaves.
There is a long history of slavery in Mauritania. Centuries ago,
Arabic-speaking Moors invaded African villages, resulting in an immutable caste
system where darker-skinned Africans are beholden to their lighter-skinned
Masters. Like inheritance, slave status is also passed down from mother to
child.
Slavery has been banned in Mauritania many times in the past but
the problem persists because the enforcement has been in the breach. In 2014,
UN Special Rapporteur reported that an estimated 50 per cent of Haratins face
some form of slavery including as domestic servants and bonded laborers.
Even with the adoption of a stronger anti-slavery law in 2015,
there have been very minimal convictions and the sentences passed often
lenient.
Mauritania is consistently ranked as the worst place in the
world for slavery and it seems that the government in Nouakchott is more
interested in concealing the atrocity instead of rooting out this evil.
The regime will like to show you how a Haratin like Messaoud
Ould Boulkheir got elected speaker of the National Assembly as a proof that
slavery in Mauritania is only but a Jewish propaganda against an Islamic state.
The Islamic Republic of Mauritania joined the Organization of
African Unity, the precursor of the African Union in May 25th, 1963. That means
that every so often, the President of Nigeria will sit across the table, in
fellowship with another in whose country, a Nigerian from a different
generation is being held as a slave in the most inhumane condition.
Then I ask again, of what value is the African Union if the body
has the likes of Mauritania within her rank, pretending to subscribe to the
idea of an integrated, prosperous and peaceful Africa eloquently stated as
her motto?
There is something to be said about black people and our
response to oppression and injustice. Just imagine for a moment that a certain
European nation is holding some African slaves in the 21st century. I can bet
you with my life that it would attract worldwide condemnation and inspire a new
breed of freedom fighters.
Okay, granted there has been some effort in that direction but
too little, too late. Here we are, giving Mauritania a free pass to commit
atrocities worse than apartheid against fellow Africans.
It does seem that black people find injustice less egregious
when committed by “one of our own”. Does it mean that the burden of it on the
victim is made lighter upon the realization that pain is being inflicted from
the home front?
If you think this piece is just some random musing about a
foreign land far removed from home and with no bearing to the situation in
Nigeria, think again.
It’s been often said that every 2 out of 10 persons in the North
are first generation immigrants, who might have come from Mali, Burkina Faso,
Guinea, Chad, Senegal, Niger like the father of President Buhari allegedly and
yes, Mauritania.
It was reported in one piece that the fire spitting Hakeem
Baba-Ahmed of the Northern Elders Forum still has living relatives in
Mauritania. Going by the color of his skin, his family most likely belong in
the “Masters” category in that country.
And so, when you analyze the speech and body language of the man
regarding what he believes should be the relationship between northern and
southern Nigeria, it makes you wonder if his worldview is a reflection of that
background.
A country where a big percentage of her citizens own slaves
should not be admitted to an assembly of civilized people. Mauritania should be
banned from African Union and the later push the campaign all the way to the
United Nations to do same.
African and African-American celebrities should beam a
searchlight on this man’s inhumanity to man thriving in Mauritania and take up
the cause of fighting for our brothers and sisters held in bondage for
centuries.
Western countries like the United States, European Union should
apply tough economic sanctions against this shame of a country. Mauritania like
Apartheid South-Africa should be treated as a pariah state, till she learns to
treat every human being with dignity. Slavery has no place in the 21st century.
Not even in Africa by Africans.
Dr. Agbo, a Public Affairs analyst is the coordinator of African Center for Transparency and Convener of Save Nigeria Project. Email: Eagleosmund@yahoo.com.
No comments:
Post a Comment