Death of George Floyd an ugly reminder for Africans

Death of George Floyd an ugly reminder for Africans

ACCRA (CNS): The May 25 killing of African-American, George Floyd, continues to receive condemnation from African governments and citizens, with some describing the killing of an unarmed black man as an unjust murder.

Floyd’s death on May 25 occurred on African Union Day. It led to protests and vigils in some African countries and reemphasised police brutalities on African immigrants and the need to eschew racism.

Church leaders throughout the world also have condemned the death and spoken out against racism.

“We stand with our kith and kin in America in these difficult and trying times, and we hope that the unfortunate, tragic death of George Floyd will inspire a lasting change in how America confronts head on the problems of hate and racism,” Ghanaian president, Nana Akufo-Addo, tweeted. He pledged to immortalise Floyd’s memory by permanently mounting his name at the Diaspora African Forum and the WEB Du Bois Centre for Pan-African Culture in Accra.

“Black people, the world over, are shocked and distraught by the killing of an unarmed black man, George Floyd, by a police officer in the United States of America,” he added. This action, the president noted, “carried with it an all too painful familiarity and an ugly reminder.”

Moussa Faki Mahamat, chairperson of the African Union Commission, issued a statement condemning the “murder of George Floyd … at the hands of law enforcement officers” and extended condolences to Floyd’s family and friends. 

He recalled the 1964 Organisation of African Unity Resolution on racial discrimination in the United States and reaffirmed “the African Union’s rejection of the continuing discriminatory practices against black citizens of the United States of America (US).”

He urged US officials to intensify their efforts to ensure the total elimination of all forms of discrimination based on race or ethnic origin.

In a virtual address on June 3 to the Organisation of African, Caribbean and Pacific States, South African president and head of the African Union, Cyril Ramaphosa, condemned Floyd’s murder and said he shared the anger of millions in the US and across the world.

“As countries that have borne the brunt of racial discrimination over centuries, we need to work together to end the scourge of racial violence, wherever it occurs. By working together, we can build a peaceful, just, healthy and prosperous global community,” Ramaphosa said.

The Forum of Former African Heads of State and Government urged African countries to “raise a strong protest” to the killing and demand that the “perpetrators of this crime and all other crimes of this sort be punished in the strongest terms.”

A June 3 statement released by former president of Benin, Nicephore Soglo, said, “What level of cruelty must you reach that the entire world finally wakes up and manifests its indignation? Who would dare here, their face visible, to treat in such a way a European, an Arab, an Israeli, an Indian, a Chinese, a Japanese, an Argentinian, etc.? Enough is enough.”

Jerry John Rawlings, Ghana’s former president, asked: “If some of these atrocities, especially from some white police officers against black citizens, cannot shock the American populace to see evidence of their own decline, what can?

“How can a police officer be the source of such cruel, violent death with knee choking down a black man’s neck till he is motionless? And why do these cruelties end up in farcical trials that see the evil culprits escape justice and capital punishment?” he asked.

The Pan-African Parliament said it “stands in solidarity against injustice, racism, discrimination, and violence of any kind based on race and ethnicity.”

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