Starmer rejects calls for slavery reparation talks

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Getty Images Keir Starmer standing in front of a Union JackGetty Images

Sir Keir Starmer has said he wants to focus on the future of the Commonwealth, after ruling out compensation for the UK's historical role in the slave trade.

All three candidates to become the next head of the 56-nation organisation have called for reparations for countries that were affected by slavery.

A group of Caribbean nations has indicated it will push for the issue to be discussed at a summit of the bloc's leaders in Samoa this week.

But the UK prime minister said he wanted to address "current future-facing challenges" rather than "spend a lot of time on the past".

Sir Keir's government has ruled out making slavery reparations, continuing a longstanding British stance on the subject.

Downing Street has also said Sir Keir will not be apologising for Britain's role in the transatlantic slave trade.

Speaking to reporters on his way to Samoa, the Labour leader said there was "no question" that slavery was "abhorrent".

But he added that he wanted to focus on the challenges that Commonwealth countries were "facing right now" rather than what "will end up being very, very long endless discussions about reparations on the past".

"This is about stance really, looking forward rather than looking backwards," he said.

The Atlantic slave trade saw millions of Africans enslaved and forced to work, especially on plantations in the Caribbean and the Americas, for centuries from around 1500.

The British government and the monarchy were prominent participants in the trade, alongside other European nations.

The UK also played a key role in ending the trade through Parliament's passage of a law to abolish slavery in 1833.

Reparations are broadly recognised as compensation for something that was deemed wrong or unfair, and can take many forms.

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