Members of the European Parliament have urged the European Union to address and reverse the lasting impact of European colonialism.
A resolution proposed by the Greens-European Free Alliance complains that the EU has made “no concerted efforts to recognise, address and rectify the lasting effects of European colonialism” and recommends a reparations programme to compensate states impacted by the legacies of colonialism and slavery.
The resolution, which faces several obstacles to be passed and adopted by the EU, is symptomatic of how the legacy of past colonialism is fast becoming a mainstream political issue in Europe and Britain.
In the decades after European overseas empires dissolved, they were rarely the subject of public debate, relegated to discussions among students and academic studies. However, fuelled by support for the Black Lives Matter movement in the US and an increased interest in critical race studies in general, activists have begun pushing politicians to engage seriously with the question.
Efforts to ‘de-colonise’ university curriculums had led to students demanding colonial-era statues be removed, a campaign that spilt beyond campus in 2020 when protestors in the UK city of Bristol destroyed the likeness of a 17th-century slave merchant.
Similar protests have occurred in France, Belgium, the Netherlands, and Germany. In turn, there appears to have been an equally fervent backlash led by some politicians on the right.
Notable gap
Yet what is curious about the renewed willingness to confront imperial legacies by some is a notable gap in their focus: the Middle East. The draft European Parliament resolution stated, “many former European colonies – including in the Caribbean, Africa and Latin America – are still suffering socially, economically, and environmentally from legacies of colonialism.”
While this is undoubtedly true, and nothing should be taken away from the damaging impact of colonialism on those regions, the same could be said of parts of the Middle East.
Indeed, it is curious that amid the global attention on the Gaza war, very few politicians or even commentators have remarked on the way that European imperialism laid the foundations for the Israel-Palestine conflict nor suggested that Britain (and France) bear some responsibility.