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African Liberation Day
May 25

Hail African Liberation Day!
Victory to the Fighting Peoples of Africa!
Imperialism, Out of Africa!

People of the Republic of the Congo, celebrate independence, July 7, 1960, one of 17 states in Africa to gain independence that year.

African Liberation Day, May 25, marks a historic convergence of the peoples of Africa to advance their sovereign nation-building projects and exercise decision-making based on their own experience and thought material, and to rid themselves once and for all of the enslavement, colonialism and imperialism of foreign powers. It marks the day in 1963 when the Organisation of African Unity was founded, an event that was a culmination of centuries of struggle against colonial exploitation and for national liberation and independence.

African Liberation Day was born out of the consciousness of the peoples of Africa that their liberation was their own act and part of the worldwide struggle against imperialism and of the united front of the working class and peoples to end the exploitation of persons by persons. It was initiated at the first Conference of Independent African States held in Accra, Ghana, on April 15, 1958, which was attended by eight independent African heads of states.[1] That day was declared “Africa Freedom Day” to mark the ongoing progress of the liberation movement.

This conference was significant in that it represented the first Pan-African Conference held on African soil. It was also significant in that it represented the collective expression of African people’s repugnance with the system of colonialism and imperialism, which brought them untold suffering. Further, it represented the collective will to see the system of colonialism and imperialism permanently driven out of the continent. The Talking Drum Collective states about this conference:

“After 500 years of the most brutal suffering known to humanity, the rape of Africa and the subsequent slave trade, which cost Africa in excess of 100,000,000 of her children, the masses of African People singularly, separately, individually, in small disconnected groupings for centuries had said, ‘enough’! But in 1958, at the Accra Conference, it was being said in ways that emphasized joint, coordinated and unified action.

“This conference gave sharp clarity and definition to Pan-Africanism for the total liberation and unification of Africa. It also laid the foundation and the strategy for the further intensification and coordination of the next stage of the African Revolution, for the liberation of the rest of Africa, and eventual and complete unification.”

In 1960, 17 African states gained their sovereignty, marking it as the “Year of Africa.”

On May 25, 1963, the Organisation of African Unity (OAU) was founded in Addis Ababa, Ethiopia, with more than 1,100 people representing 31 African states, 21 African liberation movements and hundreds of supporters and observers in attendance.[2] The OAU (today known as the African Union) proclaimed that May 25 would from then on be celebrated annually as “African Liberation Day.” Up to the present, African Liberation Day is an occasion to highlight and carry forward the aspirations of the peoples of Africa for freedom, sovereignty and a new society.

Founding meeting of OAU, May 25, 1963.

African heads of state at founding of OAU, May 25, 1963.

Today, while nearly every country in Africa has nominally achieved its independence, the peoples’ fight to block imperialist dictate and ongoing exploitation of their countries’ human and natural resources continues. Not a year goes by without the revanchism of the imperialist powers and powers of old Europe rearing its ugly head. The U.S., France and UK continue interference and military presence, particularly in north, east, west and central Africa.

A heinous example of the crimes of the imperialist powers against the African peoples is that of the destruction of Libya, whose government was overthrown by the U.S.-led aggressive military alliance NATO and its proxy forces in 2011. This was the most cynical revenge by the imperialists against the Libyan people and their leadership which fought to defend Libya’s interests and would not kowtow to imperialism. One particular consequence of the NATO bombing campaign was the racist terror inflicted on Libyans of Sub-Saharan African origin, many of whom were killed brutally and whole towns such as Tawergha were emptied. The NATO powers and their monopoly media went to great efforts to spread lies of “African mercenaries” specifically targeting Black Libyans for attack.

Accra, Ghana, September 22, 2011.

The aftermath of “regime change” in Libya widened instability, lawlessness and terrorism not only in that country but throughout North Africa and West Asia. The countries responsible include all the old colonial powers, as well as Canada. These countries must be held to account and reparations made for this crime and all the historical crimes and those of the present against African peoples. The U.S. and NATO are planning more such tragedies which must not be permitted to pass.

In the countries of southern Africa, many of which waged glorious and heroic Liberation struggles throughout the 1960s to the 1980s against the colonial powers and racist apartheid rule, the people are displaying the same heroism as they confront the problems of nation-building today. A major problem they are confronting is the continued control of important sectors of the economy by racist monopoly capital, whether foreign or coming from the legacy of racist minority rule. The peoples of countries such as Zimbabwe, South Africa and Angola which delivered strong blows against imperialism have worked staunchly to ensure that this colonial legacy does not have the upper hand.

The question of the land and its historic theft from the peoples remains of utmost importance and land reforms and redistribution have been an historic step to ensure the people have an economic base which can guarantee their livelihood and development.

Canadians and Quebeckers, who proudly count among their ranks the daughters and sons of Africa, must see to it that Canada has a government that has foreign relations based on mutual respect and benefit with the countries of Africa. Canada must repudiate participation in imperialist aggression against African countries. Far from protecting mining interests and making sure they can commit crimes with impunity in Africa, Canada must make sure they are charged and punished for the crimes they commit.

The Communist Party of Canada (Marxist-Leninist) firmly rejects the paternalistic attitude toward African countries taken by successive Canadian governments to justify exploitative relations or foreign intervention. CPC(M-L) calls on all its members and friends to oppose aggression against the countries of Africa, support the struggles of the peoples and inform themselves and others about the developments taking place there today among the 54 independent nations and more than 3,000 ethnic groups and peoples that make up 20 per cent of the world’s population.

The eminent African American leader, Pan-Africanist and communist revolutionary, W.E.B. Du Bois in his masterpiece The World and Africa underscores Africa’s wide-ranging and immense contributions to the progress of humanity in philosophy, science, the arts and culture, the economy, governance and other fields. He points out that these were deliberately suppressed by European colonizers in order to justify the transatlantic slave trade.

On the occasion of African Liberation Day, CPC(M-L) sends militant revolutionary greetings to all the peoples of Africa fighting to exercise control over their lives, countries and economies so as to guarantee a bright future for themselves and their children. CPC(M-L) salutes their achievements and contributions to the worldwide movement for national liberation which are second to none and uplift all of humanity.

Notes

1. It was attended by representatives of the governments of Ethiopia, Ghana, Liberia, Libya, Morocco, Sudan, Tunisia, the United Arab Republic (which was the federation of Egypt and Syria) and representatives of the National Liberation Front of Algeria and the Union of Cameroonian Peoples.

2. By then more than two thirds of the continent had achieved independence from colonial rule.

(TML Archives, www.thetalkingdrum.com. Photos Bettman, This Is Africa)


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