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UWI Gets Millions For Reparations

Image From left: Chairman of the CARICOM Reparations Commission (CRC) Sir Hilary Beckles; Director of the Center for Reparations Research at the UWI Professor Verene Shepherd; Jamaica’s Minister of Transportation and Works Michael Henry and Lord Anthony Gifford, member of the Jamaica Reparations Committee.

THE University of Glasgow in the United Kingdom has agreed to pay £200 million in reparation payments to the University of the West Indies.

This was disclosed by Vice Chancellor of The UWI, Sir Hilary Beckles during a recent interview on the Jamaica News Network (JNN) programme – Insight.

Image From left: Chairman of the CARICOM Reparations Commission (CRC) Sir Hilary Beckles; Director of the Center for Reparations Research at the UWI Professor Verene Shepherd; Jamaica’s Minister of Transportation and Works Michael Henry and Lord Anthony Gifford, member of the Jamaica Reparations Committee.
From left: Chairman of the CARICOM Reparations Commission (CRC) Sir Hilary Beckles; Director of the Center for Reparations Research at the UWI Professor Verene Shepherd; Jamaica’s Minister of Transportation and Works Michael Henry and Lord Anthony Gifford, member of the Jamaica Reparations Committee.

Beckles, who recently returned from the UK said the University of Glasgow recognized that Jamaican slave owners had adopted the University of Glasgow as their university of choice and that £200 million of value was extracted from Jamaica and the Caribbean.”

He said while in the UK the Vice Chancellor of the UK-based university Professor Sir Anton Muscatelli opened up their records, which showed a ‘massive influx’ of grants and endowments from Jamaica.

He added the University of Glasgow and UWI are currently drafting a memorandum of understanding, and the term ‘reparatory justice’ is expected to be included.

The £200 million would be a combination of cash and kind. “We are not on the street corners asking for handouts. We are looking for partnerships and development.”

One of the projects in which the University of Glasgow has reportedly shown interest involves research in chronic diseases in the Caribbean, including hypertension, diabetes, and childhood obesity.

“They are looking at the possibility of partnering with us and having a massive institute for chronic disease research that is going to prevent the proliferation of these diseases in the future,” said Beckles.

A report dubbed Slavery, Abolition and the University of Glasgow, published recently by the university, reveals that it benefited directly from the slave trade in Africa and the Caribbean in the 18th and 19th centuries to the tune of almost £200 million in today’s money.

The university has announced that it has launched a wide-ranging and ambitious “reparative justice programme” that is based on the findings of more than two years of research.

In addition, the University of Glasgow had also announced that it intends to implement programmes and projects that will provide scholarships and exchange programmes for Jamaican and other Caribbean students through its links with The UWI. (CMC)

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