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Recent lawsuits mark beginning of push
for slavery reparations
By Deborah Kong
AP Minority Issues Writer
Lawsuits charging that three companies profited from the
slave trade are just the beginning of a larger legal effort to seek reparations
for American blacks who are descendants of slaves.
More than a dozen of the nation’s most prominent black
attorneys and scholars expect to file suit against the U.S. government
later this year, said Randall Robinson, co-chairman of the Reparations
Coordinating Committee.
“The centerpiece of the campaign will unfold in the fall,”
said Robinson, whose book “The Debt: What America Owes to Blacks,” argues
for reparations. “We’re talking about the responsibility of the government
that participates in a crime against humanity.”
The group is still working out details such as whether
there will be a single lawsuit or multiple ones, the city where suits should
be filed and what form reparations should take, members said.
The high-powered team building the case includes Harvard
University professors Charles Ogletree and Cornel West and attorneys Johnnie
Cochran and Willie Gary.
The group has been meeting every few months for about
two years; another meeting is scheduled this month, University of Maryland
political scientist and committee member Ronald Walters said.
“This group came together because they wanted to bring
the full force of the African-American leadership behind this effort,”
Walters said.
Last week, three slave descendants filed suit against
Aetna insurance company, FleetBoston Financial Corp. and railroad giant
CSX on behalf of themselves and millions of other blacks, claiming the
companies — or their corporate predecessors — unjustly profited from slavery.
Ed Fagan, who worked on those suits, and other attorneys
plan to file more suits in the next few months against businesses in the
merchande before that.
At the heart of the reparations movement is the idea
that modern-day disparities between blacks and whites, in everything from
education to income, are the legacy of slavery.
“There is a straight line from slavery to the socio-economic
and psychological conditions of African-Americans today,” Walters said.
Slavery unfairly shifted wealth from blacks to whites,
said reparations committee member Richard America, a lecturer at Georgetown
University’s McDonough School of Business.
“Whites are unjustly enriched today as a class,” America
said. “They have income and wealth that should have gone to blacks and
was diverted by force, fraud, manipulation, exploitation and expropriation.”
Those who oppose reparations say they could cause greater
racial divisions and that many Americans today have no connection to slavery.
Advocates are still discussing what form reparations
should take.
“My feeling is there shouldn’t be checks given to people,”
said Robinson, who recently wrote “The Reckoning,” another book about the
consequences of slavery. “I’m thinking about reparations as a measure of
repair, as opposed to restitution to people of what was lost in income.”

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