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2 Jan, 2026 12:27

The bill is due: Africa demands colonial justice now

Algiers Declaration demands the codification of colonialism as a crime against humanity in international law
The bill is due: Africa demands colonial justice now

For decades, the demand for colonial reparations in Africa was treated by Western capitals as a rhetorical exercise—a radical plea from the fringes that could be safely ignored or pacified with vague “expressions of regret.” By the end of 2025 the era of Western comfort officially ended in Algiers.

With the adoption of the Algiers Declaration, the African Union (AU) has moved from moral grievance to a structured legal offensive. The declaration, born from the International Conference on the Crimes of Colonialism (Nov 30 – Dec 1), provides the first concrete roadmap for the AU’s 2025 theme: Justice through reparations. It demands the codification of colonialism as a crime against humanity in international law, the restitution of plundered wealth, and an audit of the “ecological debt”.

The ink on the declaration was barely dry before Algeria, the conference host and the historic “Mecca of Revolutionaries,” took the first sovereign step. On December 24, the Algerian National Assembly voted overwhelmingly to criminalize French colonial rule (1830–1962).

In a session described by Parliamentary Speaker Brahim Boughali as a “day written in letters of gold,” the Algerian People’s National Assembly unanimously passed a landmark law formally criminalizing 132 years of French colonial rule. This rigid legal statute categorizes 27 specific types of crimes—ranging from mass summary executions to the “ecological genocide” of Saharan nuclear testing.

By turning the spirit of the Algiers Declaration into domestic law, Algiers is signalling to Brussels and Paris that the “Decade of Reparations” is not a suggestion—it is an ultimatum. As Africa increasingly leverages its role in a shifting global order, the question is no longer whether Europe owes a debt, but how much longer it can afford the cost of denial.

The true significance of the Algiers gathering lies in its transition toward institutionalizing justice. For decades, the Western-dominated legal order has treated colonial atrocities as “unfortunate historical episodes” falling outside modern jurisdiction. The Algiers Declaration systematically dismantles this defense. By positioning the AU as a unified legal front, the conference has reclassified colonialism as a continuous, “structured crime against humanity”, with no statute of limitations.

This is a deliberate attempt to pull the reparations debate out of the hands of powerless NGOs and place it firmly within the halls of state-to-state diplomacy and international tribunals. It signals that Africa is no longer asking for “charity”; it is demanding the settlement of a multi-century debt, backed by a developing framework of continental law.

The strength of the Algiers Declaration lies in its refusal to treat colonialism as a singular, historical injury; instead, it frames it as a multi-dimensional assault that requires a multi-pronged recovery. The document outlines a framework that includes four critical pillars of accountability.

First, it demands the codification of colonial crimes within international legal instruments, calling on the International Court of Justice (ICJ) and the African Court on Human and Peoples’ Rights to recognize these acts as crimes against humanity with no statute of limitations.

Second, it introduces the concept of ‘ecological reparations,’ specifically highlighting the long-term environmental devastation caused by resource extractivism and unconventional weapon testing—most notably the French nuclear trials in the Algerian Sahara.

Third, it mandates the unconditional restitution of Africa’s cultural and tangible heritage, ensuring that “stolen history” is returned to its rightful soil.

Finally, the Declaration calls for a continental economic audit to calculate the staggering cost of centuries of resource plunder. By unifying these disparate issues into a single diplomatic platform, the AU signals that “justice” will no longer be negotiated on European terms, but will be calculated based on the full scope of the African experience.

The true legacy of the Algiers conference, however, lies in its transition from rhetoric to institutional architecture. The Declaration proposes the creation of a permanent Pan-African Committee on Memory and Historical Truth. This body is envisioned as a central clearinghouse tasked with harmonizing historical curricula across the continent and overseeing the collection of far-flung colonial archives.

Furthermore, the Declaration breaks new ground by demanding a continent-wide economic audit of colonial plunder. This audit is intended to move the reparations conversation from abstract numbers into a data-driven accounting of stolen resources, human capital, and “unjust economic systems” inherited from the colonial era. By proposing a dedicated African Reparations Fund, the AU is building its own infrastructure to support this claim, ensuring that the push for accountability is not a fleeting diplomatic moment, but a well-resourced fixture of African governance.

This unified African stance stands in stark contrast to the fragmented and defensive posture of Europe. While the European Parliament adopted  a landmark resolution in 2019 acknowledging colonial crimes, nearly six years have passed with no concrete action from Brussels. By failing to translate its own rhetoric into policy, the EU has left a vacuum that the Algiers Declaration now fills.

Under the patronage of Algerian President Abdelmadjid Tebboune, this movement has transformed into a platform for “Memorial Sovereignty.” Tebboune has consistently affirmed  that Africa’s dignity is non-negotiable. The Algiers Declaration does not exist in a vacuum; it is the institutional fulfilment of a crusade long championed by the continent’s most defiant voices. Foremost among these was the late Libyan leader Muammar Gaddafi, who arguably became the first African statesman to translate the moral grievance of colonialism into a specific, staggering financial ledger.

Addressing the UN General Assembly in 2009, Gaddafi famously quantified the colonial theft, demanding $7.77 trillion in reparations for the “ravages of colonialism,” framing it not as a request for aid but as a mandatory settlement for a multi-century “blood debt.” This was rooted in the historic 2008 Italy-Libya Friendship Treaty, where Rome formally apologized for its colonial-era crimes and committed to a $5 billion reparation package—the only treaty of its kind ever signed between a former colony and its occupier. By codifying these demands in 2025, the African Union is moving from the “unilateral defiance” of the Gaddafi era to a “multilateral mandate.”

The Algiers Declaration represents a calculated rebellion against the Western-centric narrative that has long dominated the history of the colonial era. For decades, the story of Africa’s past was filtered through a Western lens, often sanitizing the brutality of occupation as a “civilizing mission.” The Declaration marks a leading determination for the entire Global South to shatter this monopoly on truth. This intellectual offensive provides a blueprint for other regions—from the Caribbean to Southeast Asia—to move beyond the “North-South” hierarchy.

The statements, views and opinions expressed in this column are solely those of the author and do not necessarily represent those of RT.

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