French parliament backs repeal of slavery-era edicts, dodges reparations call


FILE PHOTO: Students from the U.S. attend a guided tour with Pierre Guillon de Prince, a 83-year-old descendant of a famous Nantes family whose ancestors were owners of ships transporting enslaved people, and Dieudonne Boutrin, a 59-year-old descendant of enslaved Africans in Martinique, president of the association La Coque Nomade-Fraternite, a human right association in Nantes which campaigns on slavery and reparations, at the Memorial to the Abolition of Slavery in Nantes, France, March 23, 2024. REUTERS/Stephane Mahe/File Photo

PARIS, May 28 (Reuters) - French lawmakers ⁠voted on Thursday to formally repeal slavery-era laws that defined the legal status of enslaved people ⁠as "movable property" and justified abuse and corporal punishment, though they stopped short of including demands ‌for reparations.

The largely symbolic step comes amid debate in Franceabout reparations for slavery, and about the persistence of racism and inequalities linked to colonialism in French society.

If adopted, the bill would also require the government to report to parliament on the consequences of colonial law and ​the lasting effects of slavery for French overseas territories, the legacy ⁠of slavery on racism and discrimination in French ⁠society and how the history of slavery is taught in schools.

The legislation to be repealed, known as the "Code ⁠noir" ‌in French, refers to royal edicts promulgated between 1685 and 1724. Though slavery was abolished by France in 1848, the Code noir was never formally abrogated.

"This proposal does not claim to erase history, nor ⁠to single-handedly heal the wounds of history," said Max Mathiasin, a centrist ​member of parliament from the ‌French Caribbean island of Guadeloupe, presenting the law.

"It aims to take a new step, to make a ⁠powerful act of ​remembrance, justice and recognition, by formally repealing the Code noir and all the texts that stem from it."

The 254 parliamentarians present voted unanimously for the proposal, which still needs to be debated by the upper house of parliament.

PUSH FOR REPARATIONS

French President Emmanuel ⁠Macron lent his support to the motion this month, saying ​that the old legislation should not have survived until the present day.

Macron also raised the subject of reparations, without making concrete proposals.

Some lawmakers had argued that the bill repealing the Code noir should have included demands for reparations, but ⁠Mathiasin said he did not want to "weigh down" the proposal with them.

"In my opinion, we must fight on the issue of reparations, which is the essential question," said Marcellin Nadeau, a left-wing member of parliament from the French Caribbean island of Martinique, who did not vote.

France was the third-largest actor in the transatlantic trade of enslaved people ​among European nations, after England and Portugal. It initiated 13% of expeditions as ⁠part of the tradefrom the 16th to the 19th century, according to the Memorial for the Abolition of Slavery ​at Nantes Museum.

Calls for reparations - ranging from official apologies to financial compensation - ‌have gained momentum internationally, though opponentsargue states and institutions ​shouldnot be held responsiblefor historical crimes.

In March, France abstained at the United Nations from an Africa-led resolution declaring slaverythe "gravest crime against humanity" and calling for reparations.

(Reporting by Layli Foroudi; Editing by Aidan Lewis)

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