Compiled by Dr. LESLIE JERMYN.
Slave trading post, view
through an air vent.
1441: Portugal initiates the Trans-Atlantic
Slave Trade along the coast of modern-day Mauritania.
1787: Establishment of the
London Anti-Slavery Society, now operating as Anti-Slavery International.
1838: Britain is the first European power
to abolish slavery in its New World
colonies. Others follow suit.
1888: Brazil is the last country in
Europe and the Americas to join the abolition bandwagon.
1890: General Act of Brussels commits European
powers to include abolition as part of their “civilizing mission”
in Africa.
1900: At the turn of the
last century, slavery, at least in the Euro-American worldview,
is an unfortunate chapter in world history that had been closed
everywhere but Africa.
1905:
Slavery is abolished in Mauritania under the French.
1919: Convention of Saint
Germain-en-Laye revises the Act of
Brussels and reaffirms the European commitment to end slavery
and the slave trade.
1925: League
of Nations Convention to Suppress
the Slave Trade and Slavery is signed; it is amended in 1926.
1948:
United Nations Universal Declaration of Human Rights, Article
4, prohibits slavery and the slave trade.
1956: Supplementary Convention on the Abolition of Slavery,
the Slave Trade, and Institutions and Practices Similar to Slavery
expands the definition of slavery to include such practices
as debt bondage and affirms the signatories’ commitment to abolish
them.
1961: Independent Mauritania includes abolition of chattel
slavery in its first constitution.
Senegal, former slave trading
post.
1966: United Nations International
Convenant on Civil and Political Rights,
Article 8.3, bans forced or compulsory labour.
1976: Bonded Labour
System (Abolition) Act outlaws this practice in India.
1980: Mauritania once again abolishes slavery.
1989: United Nations Convention
on the Rights of the Child, Article 32, protects children against
hazardous and exploitative work and suggests that children under
12 years of age not have jobs.
1992: Indentured labour
is outlawed in Pakistan.
1992: The Dominican Republic amends their labour
code to protect the rights of Haitian debt labourers.
1997: Brazil passes a bill to protect
workers from debt bondage.
1998: The Pakistan Carpet
Manufacturers and Exporters Association reaches
an agreement with the International Labour
Organisation to phase out industry dependence on debt labourers less than 18 years of age.
2000: Now we
stand poised to begin another century, another millennium, still
or once again convinced that slavery is a thing of the past.
The American Anti-Slavery Group estimates (as at 1999) that
there are at least 27 million slaves in the modern world. They
are living and dying around the world in such countries as Mauritania, Sudan, Uganda, Pakistan, India, Nepal, Bangladesh, Indonesia, Thailand, Philippines, Brazil, Dominican Republic, United Arab Emirates, Israel, and the USA.
© Dr. Leslie Jermyn and The Global
Aware Cooperative. Reproduction requires permission of the copyright
owner.