READ THE PETITION CHARGING THE UNITED STATES WITH ETHNOCIDE THAT WAS DISMISSED BY THE INTER AMERICAN COMMISSION ON HUMAN RIGHTS

On July 19, Kaitlyn Kennedy of tag24.com published the article SIPHIWE BALEKA'S LANDMARK PETITION SEEKING REPARATIONS FOR US ETHNOCIDE DISMISSED stating,

“Celebrated athlete and activist Siphiwe Baleka's historic reparations case has been dismissed by the Inter-American Commission on Human Rights (IACHR) without explanation.

In January, Baleka filed a groundbreaking case before the IACHR seeking redress for human rights violations perpetrated against him by the US. Baleka's petition, which combined genealogical findings with the latest in epigenetic research, accused the US government of state-sanctioned ethnocide, referring to the deliberate and systematic destruction of cultures.

A dual citizen of the US and Guinea-Bissau, Baleka traced a direct line between the trafficking and enslavement of his Balanta ancestor, Brassa Nchabra, prior to the American Revolution and the 2020 police shooting of his cousin, Jacob Blake, in Kenosha, Wisconsin.

Hoping to set a precedent for other African Americans to follow, the Balanta B’urassa History and Genealogy Society in America founder was seeking not only financial compensation for the damage done to his family, but also the transfer of at least 80 acres of land due to his ancestors Jack and Yancey Blake following Emancipation. He further called on the US to facilitate his family's repatriation efforts by redirecting resources to Guinea-Bissau for the damages wrought through colonialism. . . .

"What happens when I have exhausted every single jurisdiction?" Baleka asked. "There is no interplanetary, galactic court that I can go to and say, 'Hey look, the international justice system of planet Earth isn't providing justice, so now I need to appeal to universal alien forces.'"

"The only forum open to me was this Inter-American Commission on Human Rights, and now I see they don't respect me. I can't get justice there, so what am I supposed to do as a human being educated about my rights and how they've been violated for eight generations of my family?". . .

But Baleka also insists that international law and treaties guarantee the right to armed struggle if all other efforts to secure freedom from colonial oppression fail. Continued rejections, he warned, may leave him with little choice other than to take justice into his own hands.

"I want my day in court, and if you don't give it to me, you are literally forcing and pushing me to become a freedom fighter, which we understand from your definition, you're going to call me a 'terrorist,'" he said of the US government and other Western institutions.”

The day after his petition was dismissed, Baleka attended a meeting of the U.S. State Department for its ICCPR July 12 Civil Society Consultation. As requested, Siphiwe Baleka submitted the following questions to the U.S. State Department prior to the meeting:

Q1. What remedies are available to the Balanta people in America for redress for ethnocide?

Q2. Will the government of the United States of America engage in negotiations with the Balanta people, the government of the Republic of Guinea Bissau, the Vatican, and the Government of Portugal, under the Geneva Convention, for the final “release and repatriation” of the descendants of the Balanta, Fulani, Mandinga, Papel, Manjaco, Beafada, Brame (Mancanha), Bijago, Djola (Felupe), Mansoaca prisoners of war who were trafficked to and enslaved in America?

Q3. How can the Balanta B’urassa History and Genealogy Society in America engage in the process of receiving reparations for the crimes of slavery and ethnocide?

Although he was invited to the meeting and his questions were pre-approved, the U.S. State Department did not allow Mr. Baleka to speak and did not answer any of the questions.

READ THE PETITION TO THE IACHR

“Petty Theft” or “Special Op”? Office of Reparations Activist Burglarised, Laptops Stolen

July 16, 2023 Bissau - In the very early morning of Friday, July 14 around 3:00 am, thieves entered through a bedroom window and stole two laptops and a computer backpack which contained an ID, bank cards and credit cards from the Decade of Return Office run by Siphiwe Baleka, President of the Balanta B’urassa History and Genealogy Society in America (BBHAGSIA) and Coordinator of the Lineage Restoration Council of Guinea Bissau (LRC-GB) and Daiana Taborda Gomes, Founder and CEO of Repat Bissau which serves as a Coordinator for the Decade of Return in the capital city of Bissau.

Decade of Return office in Bissau

According to Baleka, “there was a big storm that night. While we were sleeping, the thieves entered through our bedroom window which is only three feet above our mattress. Both the front and back gates are locked so this is the only way into the house. Nothing was disturbed. It was bizarre. At first I thought it was petty thieves. But then some people suggested it might have been connected to my political activism.”

Indeed, Baleka has been at the forefront of many reparations efforts, including

  • a three-year campaign to formally charge the Vatican with issuing a declaration of total war against people from Africa in an Apostolic Edict known as the Dum Diversas (1452);

  • charging the United States with state-sanctioned ethnocide at the Inter American Commission on Human Rights (IACHR);

  • raising the claim of transgenerational epigenetic effects at the United Nations;

  • requesting a advisory opinion from the International Court of Justice (ICJ) on the status of AfroDescendant people under the Geneva Convention;

  • planning and mobilising for an plebiscite for African American self determination; and

  • formally establishing the African diaspora as the 6th Region of the African Union and immediate citizenship for the 6th Region.

Cecile Johnson, a Certified UN Human Rights Defender, Co-Facilitator of the African lol Descendant Nation, Co-Author of the National Black Agenda, CEO / Founder African Development Plan and Co- Founder Big Mama Movement Chicago remarked,

“It might be connected to [Baleka’s] political activism. Who could be so stealth [he] did not even hear? Navy seal …. Yes the poor people didn’t do this because someone would notice and tell. Yeah this was a special op. [Baleka] is bringing attention to them.”

On January 23, 2023 Baleka filed a landmark case charging the United States government with state sanctioned ethnocide. Kaitlyn Kennedy reported in Tag24,

Baleka's quest for justice has led him to the Inter-American Commission on Human Rights (IACHR), where he has filed a first-of-its-kind petition seeking redress for the continued harms he and his family experience stemming from the era of enslavement. . . . Baleka's petition builds on the insights from epigenetic research to characterize slavery as an artificial operation designed to transform human beings into chattel. . . . Baleka is seeking not only financial compensation for the damage done to his family, but also the transfer of at least 80 acres of land that are due to his ancestors Jack Blake and Yancey Blake following Emancipation. He is further calling on the US to facilitate his family's repatriation efforts by redirecting resources to Guinea-Bissau, as the damages done by colonialism have left the country at rank 175 out of 189 in the 2020 UN Human Development Index. . . . After failing to secure a hearing in the US legal system, Baleka has turned to the IACHR with his petition. He hopes the case will set a precedent for other African Americans seeking justice for the crimes of ethnocide and enslavement and show them that they, too, can have their day in court.”

However, on Tuesday, July 11, the IAHCR dismissed Baleka’s ethnocide case. They offered no explanation, only notifying Baleka of their "DECISION TO NOT OPEN FOR PROCESSING". This followed France’s recent decision to dismiss a reparations case filed by Martinique and Oklahoma’s decision to dismiss a reparations case filed by survivors of the Tulsa Race Massacre.

The following day, Baleka attended a meeting of the U.S. State Department ICCPR July 12 Civil Society Consultation regarding the United States’ upcoming presentation to the Committee on the International Covenant on Civil and Political Rights and Optional Protocols. The President of BBHAGSIA submitted a 10-page statement ahead of the meeting outlining BBHAGSIA’s three -year campaign calling for the United States to recognize the U.S. state-sanctioned ethnocide committed against Balanta people in America, and to provide reparations in the form of recognition to Balanta people in America as a federally recognized ethnic group similar to the 566 federally recognized American Indian and Alaskan Native Tribes; land concessions and autonomous self government similar to that of the 326 Indian land areas in the U.S. administered as federal Indian reservations; and negotiated voluntary repatriation with compensation back to their ancestral homelands in Guinea Bissau.

As requested, Siphiwe Baleka submitted the following questions to the U.S. State Department:

Q1. What remedies are available to the Balanta people in America for redress for ethnocide?

Q2. Will the government of the United States of America engage in negotiations with the Balanta people, the government of the Republic of Guinea Bissau, the Vatican, and the Government of Portugal, under the Geneva Convention, for the final “release and repatriation” of the descendants of the Balanta, Fulani, Mandinga, Papel, Manjaco, Beafada, Brame (Mancanha), Bijago, Djola (Felupe), Mansoaca prisoners of war who were trafficked to and enslaved in America?

Q3. How can the Balanta B’urassa History and Genealogy Society in America engage in the process of receiving reparations for the crimes of slavery and ethnocide?

Additionally, Mr. Baleka asked the government of the United States to answer the same questions posed in the MANDATE FROM THE AFRO DESCENDANT PEOPLE ISSUED TO THE PERMANENT FORUM ON PEOPLE OF AFRICAN DESCENT TO REQUEST AN ADVISORY OPINION FROM THE INTERNATIONAL COURT OF JUSTICE ON THEIR STATUS AS PRISONERS OF WAR UNDER THE GENEVA CONVENTION that invokes Article 96 of the United Nations Charter, Article 65 of the Statute of the International Court of Justice, and UN Resolution 75/314:

(a) Is the Dum Diversas apostolic decree issued by Pope Nicholas V on June 18, 1452 a declaration of “total war” - warfare that includes any and all civilian-associated resources and infrastructure as legitimate military targets, mobilizes all of the resources of society to fight the war, and gives priority to warfare over non-combatant needs - and therefore a war crime and a crime against humanity? Is there a statute of limitation regarding reparations for this war crime and crime against humanity?

(b) Were the people captured as a result of the Dum Diversas apostolic decree “prisoners of war” and do their descendants retain that status until their final “release and repatriation” under the Geneva Convention?

(c) Have the Afro Descendants - black folks - now within the United States ever been converted, in accordance with settled principles of universally established law, into United States citizens, and divested altogether of their original foreign African nationality?

(d) What rights do the Afro Descendants throughout the Americas and Caribbean have to exercise self-determination and conduct plebiscites to discern who wants to repatriate to their ancestral homeland, who wants to establish independent nation states of their own, and who wants to integrate into the states they currently reside?

(e) What are the legal consequences that arise for all States and the United Nations from the above?

The intervention with the U.S. State Department comes on the heals of the State of Illinois House of Representatives 103rd General Assembly Resolution 292 that calls upon the State to become the first to conduct a repatriation census in preparation for honoring President Abraham Lincoln's desire for voluntary repatriation with compensation and to make conducting the repatriation census its immediate priority. The resolution states,

“Additionally of note is the fact that Robin Rue Simmons (former 5th Ward Alderman for the City of Evanston, IL, where she led, in collaboration with others, the passage of the nation’s first municipally-funded reparations legislation for Black residents, which began disbursements in January 2022) , Kamm Howard (former National Co-Chair of the National Coalition of Blacks for Reparations in America), and BBHAGSIA President Siphiwe Baleka have all taken African Ancestry DNA tests and discovered they are each descendants of the Balanta people of Guinea Bissau; the subsequently traveled together to their ancestral homeland to launch the country’s Decade of Retrun Initiative in 2021;”

According to Siphiwe Baleka, “Our aim is to help the entire Lineage Restoration Movement and New Afrikan Independence Movement to exercise their self determination and establish a pathway for members of the African Diaspora to exercise their right to return to their ancestral homelands and receive citizenship which, with the implementation of AU policies by each AU member state, will allow for the freedom of movement and trade thorughout the continent.”

To further advance the Decade of Return and Citizenshship Initiative the BBHAGSIA launched in 2021, Baleka led the effort to establish the Lineage Restoration Council of Guinea Bissau that includes the Djola History and Genealogy Society in America and the Fula History and Genealogy Society in America. The new Council has drafted legislation and has been invited to meet with the newly elected National Peoples Assembly through the transition team of the winning coalition party, Plataforma Aliança Inclusiva (PAI) -- Terra Ranka, to make diaspora citizenship a priority issue of the new government.

“We hope to set an example for the other 800,000 people that have taken the African Ancestry DNA test, on how to constitute themselves into History and Genealogys Societies, form National Lineage Restoration Councils, and then proceed with the work of self determination through legislation,” said Baleka.

Additionally, On July 12 and 13, Baleka attended the PAN AFRICAN ROOTS-SYNERGY MAPUTO ROUNDTABLE (PARSMR) and made the following recommendations:

On July 13 Baleka did a second interview with Ms. Kennedy discussing the IAHCR dismissal of his Ethnocide reparations petition. It was right after that interview that the burglary happened.

“More and more people are reaching out to me saying that this was either the work of the ‘lumpen’ element or the work of people who want to stop me and my work and thus rules out the average people of Guinea Bissau,” said Baleka. “Our mattress was less than three feet directly below the window which suggests special skills needed to enter and exit without waking us, the gates at the front and back of the house being locked and requiring a key. The timing of the theft, given all my political activity and especially the past 72 hours and my interview with Kaitlyn, is suspicious. I am well aware of the fact that the last attempt to bring the United States before the world court and unite the Africans at home and abroad resulted in the assassination of Malcolm X, Burundi Prime Minister Pierre Ngendandumwe and Kenyan government official Pia Gama Pinto as well as the infamous U.S. National Security Council Memorandum 46. I don’t know what to think. Many people have come forward and said this has happened to them and suggested that organised criminals have a spray that they use to put their victims into deep sleep and then rob them. But some wise friends and elders have reached out to me and encouraged me not to lose faith in the people.”

PFPAD President Epsy Campbell Bar Agrees to sign a Request for an Advisory Opinion from the International Court of Justice on the Status of Afro Descendants Enslaved in the Americas.

DaQuan Lawrence of The Global Black Forum recently interviewed Her Excellency Dr. Epsy Campbell Barr former Vice President of Costa Rica and current President of the Permanent Forum on People of African Descent (PFPAD) and asked her about the MANDATE FROM THE AFRO DESCENDANT PEOPLE ISSUED TO THE PERMANENT FORUM ON PEOPLE OF AFRICAN DESCENT TO REQUEST AN ADVISORY OPINION FROM THE INTERNATIONAL COURT OF JUSTICE ON THEIR STATUS AS PRISONERS OF WAR UNDER THE GENEVA CONVENTION.

Here is an excerpt from that interview:

DaQuan Lawrence (39:57): I wanted to know about the proposed idea from (International Civil Society Working Group Member) Siphiwe Baleka about petitioning the International Court of Justice to get them involved as far as into an advisory opinion to be able to hold the UN accountable to be able to move forward our social movement.

PFPAD President Epsy Campbell Barr (40:12): I totally agree. I’m going to sign the petition first because I know that this is the kind of things that we have to do. . . . The role of civil society is enormous. We as the Permanent Forum, without civil society, we are nothing. Almost nothing. Because we have an isolated voice inside the UN. Because they gave us a little money. They gave us a big mandate without all the tools that we need to achieve all the goals that they gave us but that’s I understand that the petition of Siphiwe Baleka is one of those things that we need because we need the International Court of Justice take our own reality as a reality to deny rights of generations….”

According to Siphiwe Baleka, “On June 26, PFPAD President Ms. Epsy Campbell Barr confirmed in a text message that it would be her honor to sign the Request to the International Court of Justice. “ Siphiwe Baleka has been involved in a four-year campaign to complete the unfinished business of Malcolm X and Imari Obadele, both of whom wanted to bring the case of Afro Descendants before the World Court. In addition to going to the ICJ, Siphiwe Baleka will be raising the same issues to the U.S. State Department July 12.

____________________________

The Global Black Forum Episode #2 w/Her Excellency Dr. Epsy Campbell, The 1st President of the #UnitedNations Permanent Forum on People of African Descent. Dr. Campbell is the first Black woman elected to office of Vice President in the Americas and served as Vice President of the Republic of Costa Rica and Minister of Foreign Affairs between 2018-2022. ✊🏿❤️🖤💚 An economist, human rights activist and co-founder of Partido Acción Ciudadana (PAC), the Citizens’ Action Party, Dr. Campbell ran for President of Costa Rica in 2010 and 2014. She has written books and articles on topics such as democracy, inclusion, political and economic participation of women, people of African descent, sexism and racism, among others. She is an expert on issues of social development, equity, political participation of women and African descent. A dedicated women's rights activist, Dr. Campbell has led several organizations including the Center for Women of African Descent, the Alliance of Leaders of African Descent in Latin America and the Caribbean, and the Black Parliament of the Americas. In addition to her work in Costa Rica and with the United Nations, Dr. Campbell is also involved in Washington D.C.-based think-tank, the Inter-American Dialogue.

ENDORSE THE 8TH PAN AFRICAN CONGRESS PART 1 TO BE HELD LATER THIS YEAR IN HARARE, ZIMBABWE

“Since the amendment of the AU constitution, it has been brought to our attention the onus has been left to the African Diaspora to organize and collectively, in a united manner present demands to the African Heads of State as to how we wish to organize and formalize the 6th Region in the same way as the other 5 regions on the continent of Africa. . . . The 8th Pan African Congress Part 1 will primarily focus on the formalization of the 6th Region.”

- H.E. Ambassador Arikana Chihombori-Quao, Call for the 8PAC1 - September 2022

____________________________________________________________________________

We the undersigned, members of all regions of the African Diaspora, endorse the 8th Pan African Congress Part 1 in order to show evidence that the outcome is truly representative of the African Diaspora 6th Region.

8th PAC Part 1 Agenda

PATHWAY TO DUAL-CITIZENSHIP FOR CONTINENTAL DIASPORA AND DESCENDANTS OF THE FORMERLY ENSLAVED

Pathway 1: Investment 

Citizenship granted anywhere in Africa to African Diasporans who have bought a home, started a business, or invested $100,000 to $200,000 in one way or another in the country of their choice.

Pathway 2: Work

Citizenship granted anywhere in Africa to African Diasporans who have worked for three years in the country of their choice.

Pathway 3: Residency

Citizenship granted anywhere in Africa to African Diasporans that have lived in the country of their choice for three years.  For example, students, researchers, NGO workers, etc.

Pathway 4: DNA/ Right to Return 

Citizenship granted to a specific country to African Diasporans that have taken an African Ancestry DNA test and have either a maternal or paternal African lineage.

Pathway 5: Retirement

Citizenship granted anywhere in Africa to retirees upon submission of qualifying information

DIASPORA PAN AFRICAN CAPITAL FUND, DIASPORA PAN AFRICAN BANK AND DIASPORA PREFERENTIAL INVESTMENT PATHWAY FOR INTERNATIONAL CONTRACTS 

Diaspora Pan African Capital Fund 

$100 a month from 1 million African Diasporans (0.4% of the African Diaspora population) is $100 million a month. That’s $1.2 billion a year and $6 billion in five years. Investment through the fund qualifies for citizenship through Pathway 1. At maturity, money is deposited in a bank in the country of choice.

Diaspora Pan African Bank 

We need a bank that can monetize gold. Currently only 2 foreign owned banks in Africa can do this. Remittances to go through this bank.

Diaspora Preferential Investment Pathway for International Contracts

Diaspora to receive 3 to 6 month exclusive right to bid on all International Contracts. Waived or reduced fees for registering a company or for acquiring permanent residency.

INTRODUCTION TO THE AFRICAN UNION 6TH REGION

Explanation of the African Union Five Regions

The Five Regions participation in the AU organs. 

Definition of the Diaspora 

The African Union defines the African Diaspora as "Consisting of people of African origin living outside the continent, irrespective of their citizenship and nationality and who are willing to contribute to the development of the continent and the building of the African Union."

AU 6th Region Ambassadors to the PRC 

The need to make the AU 6th Region equal in function to the other 5 regions through inclusion in all AU organs starting with the Permanent Representatives Council. 

Establishment of AU 6th Region and 9th REC Headquarters 

Just as the 5 regions of the AU each have a headquarters within their region, so, too, must the AU 6th Region have a headquarters somewhere within its region such as the Caribbean. Headquarters to be financed by the Diaspora Pan African Fund with construction contributions from EU, OAS, CARICOM, AU and the host country.

Establishment of a Pan African TV and Radio Station/Network 

Nearly all organized efforts have a system of propaganda to convert people to their principles and get them to support them. Western Media, especially CNN, BBC, etc. has been and continues to be the highest form of systemic propaganda. That is why it is able in a major sense, to control the mind of the people of the world.Therefore, we must organize our propaganda to undo the propaganda of other people through a Pan African TV and Radio network that can rival CNN, BBC, etc.

Call to Action: 8PAC1

Letter to Pan Africanists Concerning the Upcoming Pan African Congress in Harare, Zimbabwe April 2023

TOWARDS THE 8TH PAN AFRICAN CONGRESS PART 1: LESSONS FROM THE 6TH PAC AND 7TH PAC

From the 8th Pan African Congress in 2014 to the 8th Pan African Congress in 2023

Outcome of the FIRST PREPARATORY MEETING FOR THE 8TH PAN AFRICAN CONGRESS PART 1 IN HARARE, ZIMBABWE

OUTCOME OF SECOND PREPARATORY MEETING FOR THE 8TH PAN AFRICAN CONGRESS PART 1 IN HARARE, ZIMBABWE

OUTCOME OF THE 3RD PREPARATORY MEETING FOR THE 8TH PAN AFRICAN CONGRESS PART 1: DIASPORA PAN AFRICAN CAPITAL FUND

OUTCOME OF THE 4TH PREPARATORY MEETING FOR THE 8TH PAN AFRICAN CONGRESS PART 1: PAN AFRICAN TV AND RADIO

5TH PREPARATORY MEETING FOR THE 8TH PAN AFRICAN CONGRESS PART 1: DEFINITION OF THE DIASPORA

COUNCIL OF PAN AFRICAN DIASPORA ELDERS FORMS TO SUPPORT THE 8TH PAN AFRICAN CONGRESS PART 1 TO BE HELD IN HARARE, ZIMBABWE

Council of Pan African Diaspora Elders Letter of Support to President Emmerson Dambudzo Mnangagwa of The Republic of Zimbabwe for the 8PAC1

DEFINING THE AFRO DESCENDANTS' RIGHT TO RETURN (RTR) TO THEIR ANCESTRAL HOMELANDS ON THE AFRICAN CONTINENT FOR THE 8PAC PART 1

The African Union and the African Diaspora - Tracking the AU 6th Region Initiative and the Right to Return Citizenship: A Resource for the 8th Pan African Congress Part 1 in Harare, Zimbabwe

Siphiwe Baleka to Address U.S. State Department on Balanta in America Self Determination and Right to Return to Guinea Bissau

June 21, 2023 - Siphiwe Baleka, Founder and President of the Balanta B’urassa History & Genealogy Society in America (BBHAGSIA) , has been invited by the U.S. State Department to address the ICCPR July 12 Civil Society Consultation regarding the United States’ upcoming presentation to the Committee on the International Covenant on Civil and Political Rights and Optional Protocols.

The President of BBHAGSIA has submitted a 10-page statement ahead of the meeting outlining BBHAGSIA’s three -year campaign calling for the United States to recognize the U.S. state-sanctioned ethnocide committed against Balanta people in America, and to provide reparations in the form of recognition to Balanta people in America as a federally recognized ethnic group similar to the 566 federally recognized American Indian and Alaskan Native Tribes; land concessions and autonomous self government similar to that of the 326 Indian land areas in the U.S. administered as federal Indian reservations; and negotiated voluntary repatriation with compensation back to their ancestral homelands in Guinea Bissau. Now, for the first time, Siphiwe Baleka will be able to speak directly to officials of the United States government.

As requested, Siphiwe Baleka submitted the following questions to the U.S. State Department:

Q1. What remedies are available to the Balanta people in America for redress for ethnocide?

Q2. Will the government of the United States of America engage in negotiations with the Balanta people, the government of the Republic of Guinea Bissau, the Vatican, and the Government of Portugal, under the Geneva Convention, for the final “release and repatriation” of the descendants of the Balanta, Fulani, Mandinga, Papel, Manjaco, Beafada, Brame (Mancanha), Bijago, Djola (Felupe), Mansoaca prisoners of war who were trafficked to and enslaved in America?

Q3. How can the Balanta B’urassa History and Genealogy Society in America engage in the process of receiving reparations for the crimes of slavery and ethnocide?

Additionally, Mr. Baleka asks the government of the United States to answer the same questions posed in the MANDATE FROM THE AFRO DESCENDANT PEOPLE ISSUED TO THE PERMANENT FORUM ON PEOPLE OF AFRICAN DESCENT TO REQUEST AN ADVISORY OPINION FROM THE INTERNATIONAL COURT OF JUSTICE ON THEIR STATUS AS PRISONERS OF WAR UNDER THE GENEVA CONVENTION that invokes Article 96 of the United Nations Charter, Article 65 of the Statute of the International Court of Justice, and UN Resolution 75/314:

(a) Is the Dum Diversas apostolic decree issued by Pope Nicholas V on June 18, 1452 a declaration of “total war” - warfare that includes any and all civilian-associated resources and infrastructure as legitimate military targets, mobilizes all of the resources of society to fight the war, and gives priority to warfare over non-combatant needs - and therefore a war crime and a crime against humanity? Is there a statute of limitation regarding reparations for this war crime and crime against humanity?

(b) Were the people captured as a result of the Dum Diversas apostolic decree “prisoners of war” and do their descendants retain that status until their final “release and repatriation” under the Geneva Convention?

(c) Have the Afro Descendants - black folks - now within the United States ever been converted, in accordance with settled principles of universally established law, into United States citizens, and divested altogether of their original foreign African nationality?

(d) What rights do the Afro Descendants throughout the Americas and Caribbean have to exercise self-determination and conduct plebiscites to discern who wants to repatriate to their ancestral homeland, who wants to establish independent nation states of their own, and who wants to integrate into the states they currently reside?

(e) What are the legal consequences that arise for all States and the United Nations from the above?

The intervention with the U.S. State Department comes on the heals of the State of Illinois House of Representatives 103rd General Assembly Resolution 292 that calls upon the State to become the first to conduct a repatriation census in preparation for honoring President Abraham Lincoln's desire for voluntary repatriation with compensation and to make conducting the repatriation census its immediate priority. The resolution states,

“Additionally of note is the fact that Robin Rue Simmons (former 5th Ward Alderman for the City of Evanston, IL, where she led, in collaboration with others, the passage of the nation’s first municipally-funded reparations legislation for Black residents, which began disbursements in January 2022) , Kamm Howard (former National Co-Chair of the National Coalition of Blacks for Reparations in America), and BBHAGSIA President Siphiwe Baleka have all taken African Ancestry DNA tests and discovered they are each descendants of the Balanta people of Guinea Bissau; the subsequently traveled together to their ancestral homeland to launch the country’s Decade of Retrun Initiative in 2021;”

According to Siphiwe Baleka, “Our aim is to help the entire Lineage Restoration Movement and New Afrikan Independence Movement to exercise their self determination and establish a pathway for members of the African Diaspora to exercise their right to return to their ancestral homelands and receive citizenship which, with the implementation of AU policies by each AU member state, will allow for the freedom of movement and trade thorughout the continent.”

To further advance the Decade of Return and Citizenshship Initiative the BBHAGSIA launched in 2021, Baleka led the effort to establish the Lineage Restoration Council of Guinea Bissau that includes the Djola History and Genealogy Society in America and the Fula History and Genealogy Society in America. The new Council has drafted legislation and has been invited to meet with the newly elected National Peoples Assembly through the transition team of the winning coalition party, Plataforma Aliança Inclusiva (PAI) -- Terra Ranka, to make diaspora citizenship a priority issue of the new government.

“We hope to set an example for the other 800,000 people that have taken the African Ancestry DNA test, on how to constitute themselves into History and Genealogys Societies, form National Lineage Restoration Councils, and then proceed with the work of self determination through legislation,” said Baleka.

JUNETEENTH: THE LINCOLN ADMINISTRATION'S RECOGNITION OF NEW AFRIKAN RIGHTS UNDER NATURAL AND INTERNATIONAL LAW, THE 14TH AMENDMENT FRAUD & THE UNFINISHED BUSINESS OF MALCOLM X AND IMARI OBADELE

On June 19, 2023, Siphiwe Baleka joined several veteran black power and Pan African activists for the Juneteenth National Reparations Virtual Teach in hosted by Krystal Muhammad of the New Black Panther Party. Below is Siphiwe Baleka’s presentation.

Balanta Basketball Star from America Arrives in Guinea Bissau during the Decade of Return

June 20, Bissau - Balanta descendant Joshua Roberts, a basketball star from the United States who has been playing in the professional basketball league in Portugal, arrives in his homeland for the first time June 20 at 11:40 am at Osvaldo Viera Airport. He is one of over 30 people that has returned under the Decade of Return Initiative launched by Siphiwe Baleka.

Balanta people played a significant role in the global Black liberation struggle in the 1960’s and early 1970’s. While Balanta people formed The African Party for the Independence of Guinea and Cape Verde (PAIGC) and initiated an eleven-year armed struggle against the Portuguese, in the United States, Balanta people were also in the forefront of the liberation struggle in America. This included Joshua Roberts’ uncle, Stephen Hobbs, who was a founding member of the Black Panther Party in Chicago.

Joshua Roberts’ little sister, Simone, is an accomplished poet who has written about her Balanta ancestry.

8PAC1 Conversations: Reparations Reverend Kwame Kamau and Siphiwe Baleka discuss Pan Africanism, Lineage Restoration and PFPAD

Later this year, the government of Zimbabwe will be hosting the “8th Pan African Congress Part 1 (8PAC1)” called by H.E. Ambassador Arikana Chihombori-Quao. The Coordinator for the 8PAC1, Siphiwe Baleka, discusses several issues facing the African Diaspora with Reverend Kwame Kamau.

Ambassador Reverend Kwame Kamau is an African Reparations Minister and Diplomat who operates as a thought leader in the intersectional and interdisciplinary spheres of Education, Economics, Entrepreneurship, Environmentalism, Empowerment of Communities, Esoterism and Emancipation Advocacy within a signature Ubuntu framework utilizing traditional and indigenous means and methodologies of restorative justice to heal the deep seated wounds of the Pan-African community in particular and the brotherhood of humanity in general.

His Excellency has been vocal about addressing the need for Racial Equality, Restorative Justice, Ethno-relevant Education, Comprehensive Health Equity, Organic Agriculture, Pan-African Ubuntu (Humanitarian) Practice and Policy, Decolonizing Christianity, etc., appearing on TV 6 Morning Edition and other local, regional and international mainstream television, radio and print media, as well as social media outlets, since 2004.

As a Public Speaker and Community Organizer, Ambassador Kamau has addressed live audiences and made several online appearances to help direct these discussions, as important and relevant as they are at this time, including, his production and hosting of an ongoing internationally supported Webinar Series, “Return To Eden – The African Ubuntu Origins of Humanity”, as well as his co-hosting of Emancipation Support Committee’s weekly radio program, “Indaba” via 91.1fm. Reverend Kamau’s Volunteerism and Community Activism includes his leadership and involvement in International Pan-African Royal and Civil Society think tanks, development & healing associations, schools, cultural, sporting and spiritual organizations and village and community councils. His participation in these varied groupings have been in diverse roles, including: Ambassador, Executive Officer, Public Relations Officer, Research Officer, Education Officer, Secretary and Director.

FOR MORE INFORMATION ABOUT THE 8TH PAN AFRICAN CONGRESS PART 1

Call to Action: 8PAC1

Letter to Pan Africanists Concerning the Upcoming Pan African Congress in Harare, Zimbabwe April 2023

TOWARDS THE 8TH PAN AFRICAN CONGRESS PART 1: LESSONS FROM THE 6TH PAC AND 7TH PAC

From the 8th Pan African Congress in 2014 to the 8th Pan African Congress in 2023

Outcome of the FIRST PREPARATORY MEETING FOR THE 8TH PAN AFRICAN CONGRESS PART 1 IN HARARE, ZIMBABWE

OUTCOME OF SECOND PREPARATORY MEETING FOR THE 8TH PAN AFRICAN CONGRESS PART 1 IN HARARE, ZIMBABWE

OUTCOME OF THE 3RD PREPARATORY MEETING FOR THE 8TH PAN AFRICAN CONGRESS PART 1: DIASPORA PAN AFRICAN CAPITAL FUND

OUTCOME OF THE 4TH PREPARATORY MEETING FOR THE 8TH PAN AFRICAN CONGRESS PART 1: PAN AFRICAN TV AND RADIO

5TH PREPARATORY MEETING FOR THE 8TH PAN AFRICAN CONGRESS PART 1: DEFINITION OF THE DIASPORA

COUNCIL OF PAN AFRICAN DIASPORA ELDERS FORMS TO SUPPORT THE 8TH PAN AFRICAN CONGRESS PART 1 TO BE HELD IN HARARE, ZIMBABWE

Council of Pan African Diaspora Elders Letter of Support to President Emmerson Dambudzo Mnangagwa of The Republic of Zimbabwe for the 8PAC1

DEFINING THE AFRO DESCENDANTS' RIGHT TO RETURN (RTR) TO THEIR ANCESTRAL HOMELANDS ON THE AFRICAN CONTINENT FOR THE 8PAC PART 1

The African Union and the African Diaspora - Tracking the AU 6th Region Initiative and the Right to Return Citizenship: A Resource for the 8th Pan African Congress Part 1 in Harare, Zimbabwe

Direct and Certain Causal Nexus: Reparatory Justice for Quantifiable Harms and The Importance of the PFPAD Mandate to Request an Advisory Opinion from the International Court of Justice (ICJ)

Image from QUANTIFICATION OF REPARATIONS FOR TRANSATLANTIC CHATTEL SLAVERY, prepared by Coleman Bazelon Alberto Vargas Rohan Janakiraman Mary M. Olson PREPARED FOR The University of the West Indies and The American Society of International Law’s, Second Symposium on Reparations Under International Law June8, 2023

The International Symposium on the Lawfulness of Transatlantic Chattel Slavery (TCS) , co-sponsored by the American Society of International Law (ASIL) and the University of the West Indies (UWI), was held on 20- 21 May 2021.

A Second Symposium on the reparations due for TCS was held on 9-10 February 2023. At that Symposium, the Brattle Group presented their Report on Reparations. An Advisory Committee was established to resolve difficult issues arising from the assessment of reparations. The Committee consists of Chantal Thomas, Professor of Law, Cornell University, Verene Shepherd, Professor of Social History and Director of the Centre for Reparations Research, Robert Beckford, Professor of Social Justice at University of Winchester, Professor of Theology at the Queen's Foundation in Birmingham and Professor of Theology at Vrije University in Amsterdam, and Patrick Robinson, Honorary President of ASIL.

The first symposium concluded that the legality of transatlantic chattel slavery depended on the law of the country in which the transaction of enslavement took place. Those transaction took place in African countries, the law and practice of which were opposed to TCS. A second conclusion was that TCS breached a normative principle of humanity which called for respect of the inherent dignity and personhood of all human beings, including Africans. Thus, it was concluded that TCS was unlawful on the basis of the law applicable at that time.

The question, remains:

How then, do we hold the guilty criminals responsible and secure reparatory justice now?

According to the Report on Reparations for Transatlantic Chattel Slavery in the Americas and the Caribbean published by the Battle Group, June 8, 2023,

“In order to assess the reparations that are due it must be established that the injuries or harm suffered by the enslaved are the consequence of wrongful conduct by those who carried out transatlantic chattel slavery. . . The legal basis for reparations is set out in a well-known case, the Factory at Chorzów, in which the Permanent Court of International Justice (PCIJ) stated

‘it is a principle of international law that the breach of an engagement involves an obligation to make reparation in an adequate form’;

reparation

‘must, as far as possible, wipe out all the consequences of the illegal act and re-establish the situation which would, in all probability, have existed if that act had not been committed.’

This principle is reflected in Article 31 of the International Law Commission’s Articles on Responsibility of States for Internationally Wrongful Acts (hereinafter, the ILC Articles on State Responsibility), which provides that

‘the responsible State is under an obligation to make full reparation for the damage caused by the internationally wrongful conduct’.

The forms of reparation are restitution, compensation and satisfaction; these are reflected in Articles 35, 36 and 37 respectively of the ILC Articles on State Responsibility. . . .

One of the most important legal requirements in reparations is to establish causation, that is, that the alleged injury or damage is the consequence of the wrongful conduct of the States that carried out TCS, or in the language of the ICJ, that

‘there was a sufficiently direct and certain causal nexus’ between particular acts carried out in the practice of TCS and the injury suffered.’”

Here, then, is the importance of the Mandate from the Afro Descendant People Issued to the Permanent Forum on People of African Descent to Request an Advisory Opinion from the International Court of Justice on their Status as Prisoners of War Under the Geneva Convention. The Requst for the Advisory Opinion of the ICJ seeks confirmation from the ICJ on the fundamental questions establishing direct and certain causal nexus’ between particular acts carried out in the practice of TCS and the injury suffered. Specifically, the Request for the Advisory Opinon of the ICJ seeks to establish the origina and foundation of TCS in the Dum Diversas Apostolic Edict declaring total war on the “land of Guine"‘ by Pope Nicholas V on June 18, 1452. The Dum Diversas declaration of war was followed up with monopoly contracts known as “Asientos” which were variously granted by the Catholic Church to private merchants from 1518 to 1595, to Portugal from 1595 to 1640, to the Genoese (Italy) from 1662 to 1671, to the Dutch and Portuguese from 1671 to 1701, to France 1701-1713, the British 1713 to 1750, and the Spanish 1765 to 1779. In the United States, several colonies became combatants to the Dum Diversas War when they legalized slavery: Massachusetts in 1641; Connecticut in 1650; Virginia in 1657 and Maryland in 1663. Other colonies followed and the United States of America officially entered the Dum Diversas War trafficking of people from Guine after American independence in 1776.

The Dum Diversas and Asiento contracts, then, establish the direct and certain causal nexus of the Transatlantic Chattel Slavery.

The next step in legal reparatory justice at this moment is for the ICJ to once and for all settle these questions:

(a) Is the Dum Diversas apostolic decree issued by Pope Nicholas V on June 18, 1452 a declaration of “total war” - warfare that includes any and all civilian-associated resources and infrastructure as legitimate military targets, mobilizes all of the resources of society to fight the war, and gives priority to warfare over non-combatant needs - and therefore a war crime and a crime against humanity? Is there a statute of limitation regarding reparations for this war crime and crime against humanity?

(b) Were the people captured as a result of the Dum Diversas apostolic decree “prisoners of war” and do their descendants retain that status until their final “release and repatriation” under the Geneva Convention?

On June 2, 2023, the President of the Permanent Forum on People of African Descent (PFPAD), Ms. Epsy Campbell-Barr had the opportunity to take the next step by signing the Request for the Advisory Opinion of the ICJ. Unfortunately she declined against the will of 248 signatories to the Mandate insisting that she exercise PFPAD’s mandate to do so and the popular support among the delegates at the second session of PFPAD held in New York. AN OPEN LETTER TO EPSY CAMPBELL BARR IMMEDIATELY FOLLOWING THE CLOSE OF THE 2ND SESSION OF THE PERMANENT FORUM ON PEOPLE OF AFRICAN DESCENT was sent requesting an explanation.

Meanwhile, the 2nd Session of the Forum’s Preliminary Conclusions and Recommendations. Point 16(b) calls for a specialized international tribunal constituted to adjudicate reparations claims following the proposal from Barbados and 16(c) calls for an international UN Task Force of Reparatory Justice, ostensibly following the proposal made by Justin Hansford in his opening address to convene

a new community of legal thinkers that is not limited to lawyers, but includes anyone who is passionate about justice. And we come together and demand that many of the states in this room that have benefitted from the legacy of our oppression start the process of apology and reparation, but not on their terms, but on our terms.”

But this has already been done.

Ransom and Such (1990) calculated that the profits of the slave system from 1806 to 1860 compounded to 1983 came to $3.4 billion. The present value of that sum compounded to the present at an annual interest rate of 5 percent is $9.12 billion.

Larry Neal (1990) derived an estimate of $1.4 trillion based on the gap between the wage an enslaved African would have received had he or she been a free laborer and what was spent on slave maintenance by slave-owners between 1620 and 1840. Again, compounding the interest to the present at 5 percent interest yields a total close to $4 trillion by the end of 2004.

James Marketti (1990) utilized a concept of income diverted from enslaved Africans during the course of slavery in the United States to arrive at a figure of $2.1 trillion by 1983.The present value after compounding the interest is $6 trillion. If you use the "40 acres and a mule" from General Sherman's Special Orders No. 15 for a family of four, then, a conservative estimate of the price of land in 1865 is $10 per acre. A conservative estimate of the total number of ex-slaves at the time of emancipation is 4 million which would yield 40 million acres of land valued at $400 million should have been distributed to the ex-slaves in 1865. The present value of that sum of money compounded from 1865 at 6% would amount to $1.3 trillion. If there are approximately 30 million descendants of enslaved Africans in the United States today, the estimate based on 40 acres yields an allocation of slightly more than $400,000 per recipient.

Chachere and Udinskly (1990) estimate that the gains to whites from labor market discrimination during the period 1929-1969 to be $1.6 trillion.

By the year 2000, Joe R. Feagin in his paper Documenting the Costs of Slavery, Segregation and Contemporary Discrimination concluded that

‘Clearly, the sum total of the worth of all the black labor stolen by whites through the means of slavery, segregation, and contemporary discrimination...taking into account lost interest over time and putting it in today's dollars, is perhaps in the range of $5 to $24 trillion.’

In late 2000, a new project called the Reparations Assessment Group began making preparations for lawsuits. The dollar sums mentioned were staggering. Harper’s magazine estimated that it could require $97 trillion to pay for the hours of uncompensated work done during the slavery era, which would require extracting, on average, about $300,000 from every American of non-slave descent.”

On June 8, 2023, the Brattle Group presented its QUANTIFICATION OF REPARATIONS FOR TRANSATLANTIC CHATTEL SLAVERY concluding that,

“The harm caused by transatlantic chattel slavery was vast, and its repercussions resonate in the lives of descendants of the enslaved to this day. Each enslaved person experienced overwhelming harm, beginning with the loss of their liberty and often ending with a premature death after a life marked by personal injury and other forms of violence, if they survived the Middle Passage. By our estimates, these harms were inflicted on 19 million people over the span of four centuries. These 19 million include those Africans kidnapped and transported to the Americas and Caribbean and those born into slavery. Given the depth, breadth, and duration of the harm, quantifying the associated reparations is a daunting task. . . .To meet this challenge, we begin by separating the harm into two broad temporal categories. First for harm during the period when chattel slavery was carried out and, second, for continuing harm thereafter. . . .For the period of enslavement, including any post-emancipation period of ‘apprenticeship’ where the formerly enslaved were ‘earning’ their freedom, we estimate US$77 trillion to US$108 trillion in reparations.”

We don’t need to delay reparatory justice by convening yet another study group. What is needed now is to engage the ICJ in the only manner open to people of African Descenent in the African Diaspora - using Un resultion 75/314 that creates the PFPAD and gives it the authority to request advisory opinions from the ICJ.

What is needed now is for the ICJ to issue its advisory opinion on whether or not

The Dum Diversas and Asiento contracts, then, establish the direct and certain causal nexus of the Transatlantic Chattel Slavery.