Abstract

The paper attempts to inform Africans and the world at large of the triple evils of colonial capitalism, state terrorism, and racism and of different forms of African resistance in order to search for new ways of implementing universal human rights laws and the rights of indigenous people. Most indigenous Africans are immensely underdeveloped and have suffered for more than five centuries because of these triple evils that have been imposed on them by European colonial powers, successive global powers, and their African collaborators. The European colonial powers, namely Spain, Portugal, England, Holland, France, Belgium, Germany, and Italy and their African collaborators terrorized, exterminated, abused, and misused indigenous Africans from the 16th to the first half of the 19th centuries, and consequently they have underdeveloped and impoverished the surviving African populations. The homelands and economic and natural resources of Africans were expropriated and transferred to European colonial settlers, their descendants and their African collaborators that have no interest to protect the political, economic, civil, and social rights of these people. Since most of these indigenous peoples are still not represented in government, academic, economic and media institutions of neo-colonial African states, their voices are muzzled and hidden and most people of the world are misinformed and know nothing or little about them. By degrading and erasing the cultures, histories, and humanity of indigenous Africans, the descendants of the settlers and their African collaborators have convinced themselves that they can continue to terrorize and dispossess the resources of these people without moral/ethical and political responsibilities with the help of powerful states of the West and that of China (Quan 2013) as well as global financial institutions such as the World Bank and International Monetary Fund.   Key words: Colonial capitalism, terrorism, racism, underdevelopment, indigenous Africans, human rights, self- determination, democracy, and social injustice.

Highlights

  • Indigenous Africans are still underdeveloped and impoverished

  • The Europeans had the power of technology, organizational capacity, and resources to build and use professional armies devoted to full-time war and terrorism; they had the ability to recruit large armies of African mercenaries who were ready to fight on their behalf in Africa and beyond and to provide information on Africa

  • The descendants of the colonizers and powerful EuroAmerican nations and their African collaborators of today should realize that originally the lands, labor and other resources of the indigenous African peoples mightily contributed to their processes of wealth/capital accumulation, power, and knowledge and start to rethink ways of recognizing the crimes committed against humanity and to compensate the surviving indigenous peoples one way of the other

Read more

Summary

Jalata Asafa

University of Tennessee at Knoxville, United States. The paper attempts to inform Africans and the world at large of the triple evils of colonial capitalism, state terrorism, and racism and of different forms of African resistance in order to search for new ways of implementing universal human rights laws and the rights of indigenous people. The homelands and economic and natural resources of Africans were expropriated and transferred to European colonial settlers, their descendants and their African collaborators that have no interest to protect the political, economic, civil, and social rights of these people. Since most of these indigenous peoples are still not represented in government, academic, economic and media institutions of neo-colonial African states, their voices are muzzled and hidden and most people of the world are misinformed and know nothing or little about them.

INTRODUCTION
Theoretical and methodological Insights
The persistent causes of underdevelopment and poverty
Arabs and their African collaborators and exported to
The first Dutch settlers arrived in the Cape peninsula in
African chiefs understood the contents of the treaties”
African leaders who signed treaties also resisted
The refusal to accept the demand of the Ashanti
Findings
DISCUSSION AND CONCLUSION
Full Text
Paper version not known

Talk to us

Join us for a 30 min session where you can share your feedback and ask us any queries you have

Schedule a call

Disclaimer: All third-party content on this website/platform is and will remain the property of their respective owners and is provided on "as is" basis without any warranties, express or implied. Use of third-party content does not indicate any affiliation, sponsorship with or endorsement by them. Any references to third-party content is to identify the corresponding services and shall be considered fair use under The CopyrightLaw.