Ramaphosa Demands Colonial Reparations at UN, Citing Body's Own Resolution
South Africa's president used an April 2026 UN General Assembly address to demand compensation from Britain and the Netherlands, invoking a body resolution to give his case legal foundation. The move signals a harder line from Pretoria on historical injustice — and sharpens a confrontation with former colonisers that multilateral forums have quietly enabled.

South Africa's President Cyril Ramaphosa told the United Nations General Assembly on 30 April 2026 that former colonial powers including Britain and the Netherlands owe Africa compensation — and cited the world body's own resolution as the legal basis for that demand. The intervention, reported by PressTV on 4 May, marks one of the most explicit uses by a head of state of multilateral architecture to push financial reparation claims against European governments.
Ramaphosa said compensation from colonial powers was not a political ask but a structural necessity for development, framing the issue as one of economic justice rather than symbolic gesture. The position puts Pretoria on record alongside a growing cohort of developing nations who have spent years translating anti-colonial rhetoric into specific, enforceable legal demands.
The UN Resolution That Changed the Ground Rules
The legal hook Ramaphosa invoked is not new — it was established in April 2024 when the UN General Assembly passed a resolution requesting an International Court of Justice advisory opinion on the legality of colonialism. South Africa was among the co-sponsors. The ICJ delivered that opinion in October 2025, finding that nations maintaining colonial territories must act with urgency for their removal and that prolonged occupation constituted a breach of international law. Advisory opinions carry no binding enforcement mechanism, but they reframe what is legally arguable in multilateral spaces and give states a documented basis for claims that previously could be dismissed as political rhetoric.
Ramaphosa has now converted that legal foundation into a financial argument — demanding specific compensation from Britain, the Netherlands, and unnamed others for extraction, land seizure, and governance disruption during the colonial period. The scale of what Pretoria is asking for, if stated in dollar terms, has not been fully disclosed in the sources reviewed; but the framing — development and justice as inseparable from monetary restitution — suggests the claim is substantial and not designed as a conversation-starter.
Why Former Colonial Powers Resist
Britain and the Netherlands have rebuffed reparation demands before. The UK government rejected Caribbean claims in 2023, calling them anachronistic and unworkable. The Netherlands has taken a similarly defensive posture when pressed. The United States, which controlled overseas territories well into the twentieth century, has blocked General Assembly resolutions on a US reparations commission. The pattern is consistent: Western governments treat reparation demands as a political liability rather than a legal obligation.
That posture is increasingly difficult to sustain as the legal architecture around colonial-era claims thickens. The ICJ advisory opinion gave the reparation movement its most significant institutional endorsement since the CARICOM demand on Europe in 2023. Ramaphosa is not inventing a new argument — he is citing an existing resolution that 139 member states voted for.
The Structural Position: Who Controls the Outcome
The gap between legal opinion and actual compensation is wide by design. The international system was built by the same powers now being asked to pay — and the mechanisms for enforcing obligations on sovereign states remain weak. UN General Assembly resolutions are non-binding. The ICJ has no enforcement arm. Developing nations have been making this argument for decades and have rarely extracted more than acknowledgment.
What has changed is the coalition. The 2024 UN resolution passed with 139 votes. That is not a fringe position — it is a majority of the world's states, drawn from Latin America, Africa, the Middle East, and Asia, acting in concert. The financial exposure for former colonisers, if reparation frameworks are ever agreed, is not marginal. Research commissioned by the Caribbean Community estimated that Britain alone owed figures running into the hundreds of billions for transatlantic slavery. Africa would multiply that exposure substantially.
Stakes: Legal Precedent, Financial Exposure, and Multipolar Leverage
The stakes are concrete. If reparation claims gain traction inside UN forums and translate into formal compensation mechanisms, former colonial powers face legal and financial consequences measured in decades of back-payment. For African states, formal acknowledgment and transfer of resources would constitute a structural rebalancing — not only financially but in terms of the narrative asymmetry that has allowed Western governments to treat colonial history as settled rather than outstanding.
The counterargument — that compensation demands destabilise bilateral relations, discourage investment, and entrench grievance politics — has been made by every government resisting these claims. It has not been tested against a formal, multilateral compensation framework, because no such framework exists yet. Ramaphosa is trying to create the conditions for one.
Whether the mechanism is a UN-administered fund, bilateral agreements, or arbitration panels, the outcome depends on whether the coalition of states willing to push this argument can sustain pressure through multiple institutional cycles. The legal foundation is in place. The political will is being tested.
This article was written from two primary sources: PressTV's English-language coverage of Ramaphosa's UN address and Jahan Tasnim's reporting of the same event. Both cited the UN General Assembly resolution as the legal basis for the demand. No Western wire service published equivalent reporting from the same event as of the time of writing.
Wire provenance
This editorial synthesis draws on the following public wire/social posts:
- https://t.me/presstv/28458
- https://t.me/JahanTasnim/31891