Friday, 22 August 2014

BRISTOL:NATWEST BANK & ITS SLAVE PAST

Our mission is to get justice for those who have profited from the proceeds of crime. Slavery is a crime against humanity and it doesn't just go away. We must deal with it now and bring justice for all those who are continuing to suffer from its effects and the effects of colonisation. Britain was built on its trade with Africa.- It was also built on its trade with India and China - but it has never acknowledged slavery as a crime that it committed. The information is still there and the AUP will continue to expose it until it is dealt with.Until the modern day slavelords take responsibility for its unfair advantages.

LOOK AT THE DIRECTION OF THE TRIANGLE....

ITS THE SAME ONE USED BY THE SLAVE TRADERS... SOUTH THEN WEST THEN NORTH ... A PYRAMID OF CRIMINAL TRADE.





               NATWEST BANK & SLAVERY
          THE LINKS TO THE SLAVE TRADE
Sweet History landmark (photo)


Before I comment first read this reference material:

Address: 32 Corn Street, BS1 1HQ
Date: Georgian period (1714-1837)

Ref:
On the wall of the Natwest Bank there is a plaque which remembers ‘The Old Bank’ that was first set up in 1750. This was the site of one of the first banks outside London. The Old Bank was started up by traders to Africa, which shows the link between the slave trade in Bristol and the development of the banking system.
The bank's origins date back to 1658 with the foundation of Smith's Bank ofNottingham.[1] The creation of the modern bank was announced in 1968, and National Westminster Bank Limited commenced trading on 1 January 1970, after the statutory process of integration had been completed in 1969.[2] The famous three arrowheads symbol was adopted as the new bank's logo; it is said to symbolise either the circulation of money in the financial system or the bank's three constituents, National Provincial Bank, Westminster Bank, and District Bank (The District Bank was established in 1829, and was acquired by National Provincial Bank in 1962 and allowed to operate under its own name until the formation of National Westminster Bank. The District, National Provincial, and Westminster Banks were fully integrated in the new firm's structure, while Coutts & Co. private bankers (a 1920 National Provincial acquisition, established 1692), Ulster Bank in Northern Ireland (a 1917 Westminster acquisition, established 1836) and the Isle of Man Bank (a 1961 National Provincial acquisition, established 1865) continued as separate operations. Westminster Foreign Bank (established 1913) was restyled International Westminster Bank in 1973. Duncan Stirling, outgoing chairman of Westminster Bank, became first chairman of the fifth largest bank in the world.[

Slavery and the rise of the Banking system – Background information

‘From the 1660s the British economy flourished thanks to banking and other financial institutions. Overseas trade and colonial expansion relied on trading houses, insurance companies and banks. The slave trade relied heavily on credit and the risks meant a growth in maritime insurance. Before the 1660s there were no banks in London, and even a century later, banking was under-developed outside the city. The Bank of England was set up in 1694, and underpinned the whole system of commercial credit, and its wealthy City members, from the governor down, often made their money wholly or partly in the slave trade. Provincial banking across England only emerged in the 18th century.
Because slave voyages could take 18 months, and each of the three legs of the journey involved buying and selling, credit was used to underwrite the journeys. In the early days of the slave trade, a group of merchants, or what we would now call venture capitalists, would finance a ship; over time more formal financial organisations including Lloyds and Barings banks were established for this purpose. Enslaved Africans were insured as goods, along with other property’.
Corn Street
Corn Street was the street where many merchants did business during the 1700s. They traded in cloth from India, butter, eggs and chickens from Wales, goods made from iron from the centre of England, and slave produced goods from the Caribbean and North America such as sugar, tobacco, coffee and chocolate.

Natwest Bank

The National Westminster Bank on Corn Street has a plaque on the wall that commemorates the Old Bank, that was originally set up in nearby Broad Street in 1750 (see site 9 of Sweet History? trail). This once was the site of one of the first banks outside London. This was one of the banks that eventually merged into the National Westminster Bank. All but one of the bank’s founders were traders to Africa, including Merchant Venturer Isaac Elton. This shows the connection between Bristol’s slave trade and the development of the banking system.
A Bristol bank note signed by Harford and MilesONCE heralded as the second city in the kingdom, noted for its industrious residents and overseas trade, Bristol has a long and illustrious banking history.
The city's first banking enterprise, founded in 1750 in Broad Street, was the Bristol Bank, known later as the Old Bank.
Two of the partners, Onesiphorus Tyndall and Isaac Elton from Clevedon Court, had financial interests in West Indian sugar and the trade in slaves.
In 1777 the bank moved to Clare Street and, in 1794, to No 35 Corn Street.
In 1826 the Old Bank merged with rival bankers Ames, Cave and Co which had established itself as the New Bank in Corn Street in 1786.
Other partners in the New Bank included well-known Bristol businessmen Joseph Harford, George Daubeny and Richard Bright.
Another early bank (1752), situated in Corn Street, was the Miles Bank, which in 1820 merged with the Harford Bank, based in Small Street.
The Miles Bank also played an important role in financing Bristol's sugar trade with the West Indies. Many of the partners owned estates there.
In 1877, Miles, Harford and Co merged with the Old Bank, which had nine partners – the most powerful businessmen in the city.
However, 1891 saw the end of this Bristol institution as it became part of a four-way banking conglomerate, dominated by London's finance houses.
In 1908 this amalgamation, then known as Prescott's Bank, moved to No 36, Corn Street.
Ten years later, after yet another merger, the Old Bank came under the umbrella of the National Provincial Bank, which already had an office in the city.
In 1968, the National Provincial Bank and Westminster Bank merged to become the National Westminster Bank – NatWest – now a division of the Royal Bank of Scotland.
On Corn Street is an impressive, honey-coloured building with a worn stone plaque proclaiming "the Old Bank". The bank was formed by slave traders and, after being merged with others, went on to become the NatWest.
Such buildings are testimony to a trade that was conducted with extraordinary vigour. It is estimated that Britain transported more than three million African people across the Atlantic (500,000 on Bristol ships alone), an epic trade that involved some 10,000 voyages and swelled the coffers of the owners. By the Victorian era, as many as one in six of the wealthiest Britons derived at least some of their fortunes from slavery. Few seemed to have any qualms. The Quakers, for example, had been enthusiastic investors.
"Before 1760, they were up to their eyeballs in it," said Madge Dresser, associate professor in history at the University of the West of England. Later they were in the vanguard of the 19th-century antislavery movement.

The Triangular Trade

The Slave TradeThe Transatlantic Slave Trade had three stages: 
STAGE 1
  • Slave ships from Britain left ports like London, Liverpool and Bristol for West Africa carrying goods such as cloth, guns, ironware and drink that had been made in Britain.
  • Later, on the West African coast, these goods would be traded for men, women and children who had been captured by slave traders or bought from African chiefs.
STAGE 2
  • African dealers kidnapped people from villages up to hundreds of miles inland. One of these people was Quobna Ottabah Cugoano who described in the autobiography how the slavers attacked with pistols and threatened to kill those who did not obey. They marched the captives to the coast where they would be traded for goods. The prisoners would be forced to march long distances, as Major Galan describes, with their hands tied behind their backs and their necks connected by wooden yokes.
  • On the African coast, European traders bought enslaved peoples from travelling African dealers or nearby African chiefs. Families were separated.
  • The traders held the enslaved Africans until a ship appeared, and then sold them to a European or African captain. It often took a long time for a captain to fill his ship. He rarely filled his ship in one spot. Instead he would spend three to four months sailing along the coast, looking for the fittest and cheapest slaves.
  • Ships would sail up and down the coast filling their holds with enslaved Africans. On the brutal ‘Middle Passage', enslaved Africans were densely packed onto ships that would carry them to the West Indies.
  • There were many cases of violent resistance by Africans against slave ships and their crews. These included attacks from the shore by  ‘free' Africans against ships or longboats and many cases of shipboard revolt by slaves.
STAGE 3
  • In the West Indies enslaved Africans would be sold to the highest bidder at slave auctions.
  • Once they had been bought, enslaved Africans worked for nothing on plantations.
  • They belonged to the plantation owner, like any other possession, and had no rights at all. The enslaved Africans were often punished very harshly.
  • Enslaved Africans resisted against their enslavement in many ways, from revolution to silent, personal resistance. Some refused to be enslaved and took their own lives. Sometimes pregnant women preferred abortion to bringing a child into slavery.
  • On the plantations, many enslaved Africans tried to slow down the pace of work by pretending to be ill, causing fires or ‘accidentally' breaking tools. Whenever possible, enslaved Africans ran away. Some escaped to South America, England or North America. Also there were hundreds of slave revolts.
  • Two thirds of the enslaved Africans, taken to the Americas, ended up on sugar plantations. Sugar was used to sweeten another crop harvested by enslaved Africans in the West Indies - coffee.
  • With the money made from the sale of enslaved Africans, goods such as sugar, coffee and tobacco were bought and carried back to Britain for sale. The ships were loaded with produce from the plantations for the voyage home.

..............................................................................................................
AND My 2 cents:
1.     There’s NO doubt that the British banking institutions have profited from the slave trade.
2.     Particularly, one of the main ones was created by what is known as the” triangular trade”. This was the symbol which was and still is the forerunner of the modern day NATWEST which is now owned by the Royal Bank of Scotland.
3.     The culprits or merchants who were in the slave trade were bailed out by the government of the day for their own mistakes. Similar to what happened in 2008 ; Many of those responsible for the slave trade were compensated which is even sick to consider now.


And what have the people of Africa and their descendants been compensated with?



More instability, more exploitation and more insecurity.

Until Britain acknowledges its debt to the slave trade and to Africa  and acts on it– all of us will not be free.

We don’t want your charity, we want your respect.

Robin Denton
President
Africa Unite Movement
Bristol.UK







Tuesday, 19 August 2014

END SLAVERY NOW!











Here is a petition I would like ALL the people of Britain to sign. It isnt an outright apology for the crimes of slavery ... but it is a start for an acknowledgement of slavery as a crime against humanity.

There still is the perception that Britain will never apologize for slavery. But the truth is that it cannot get away from its legacy and must face up to it ...sooner or later.We can no longer live in denial! It is not up to our leaders to grow a conscience;..it is up to "PEOPLE POWER" to make it happen so that they finally do the right thing...!This is the 21st Century NOT the Middle Ages- we can change our collective destiny and create a better future for us all- Support this campaign to end ALL forms of slavery once and for all!
I thank you.

Here is a copy of the FIRST petition that the AUP is circulating to the activists of the world... go out there and GET SIGNATURES...

END ALL SLAVERY NOW!

We, the people of Great Britain acknowledge that slavery is a crime against humanity and call upon all peoples of the world to end all forms of slavery now. We call upon our leaders to condemn in the strongest possible terms all forms of exploitation for profit or gain and to repair the wounds of the past and present through truth, reconciliation and restoration.
May all beings live in peace, justice and freedom with each other! End slavery NOW!
Please sign this petition to show your support for this honourable cause:

Name                                                                                                     Email / Tel


Monday, 18 August 2014

AFRICA UNITE NEWZINE: July edition-BRISTOL: WHAT THEN ABOUT SLAVERY?

There have been some new developments in the evolution of our party. As founder and president of the movement & party I am responsible for overseeing the growth and direction of this organisation. In this short issue we shall discuss the issues of slavery- should there be an acknowledgement by the perpetrator nations of this crime against humanity...and should the victim nations ie africa receive reparations from the proceeds of these crimes 200 years on.

It is interesting to note that there has been only ONE apology... from a British prime minister...and that is from Tony Blair. Now we are happy that his office had the courage to say...sorry for this crime. But there are many more issues to think about here.

1. Do we take the word of a war criminal?
2. What is being done by the people for Britain to repair the damage caused by slavery & imperialism in Africa by Britain and America,Italy, Portugal,France,Russia and China, Saudi Arabia and the UAE...Amongst I am sure ...many many others.
3. Who is responsible for the slave trade?
4. How have and how do the slavelords and their descendants benefit today from the criminal slave trade - and should we activate the "proceeds of crime act " in much the same way that the UK does so with its own criminals...and prosecutes criminals in much the same way as the Jews did the Nazis.
5. How much did America & Britain profit from the slave trade- and why are they the main perpetrators who need to be held to account?

But first what has news from the AUP?



Our first bit of news is that our vice president has been replaced by Frans Thukwane - an advocate from Pretoria . We wish to thank Pastor Charles Badenhorst for his valuable contribution in the first stage of the founding of our great movement and party; thank you Charles for your contribution!We all wish you well in the future in your working the Township of Daveyton and elsewhere across Africa! God bless you.

Frans will be running for local elections in Pretoria in 2016. In the mean time he will be responsible on the ground for any queries about the party's principles.He can be contacted on 082 0879165or by email on thandeni.thukwane@gmail.com. We have also appointed a new secretary for the party who is also able to answer any queries from the press. He is also heading up the business forum at the Business Ambassadors Club ( BAC)- His contact details are as follows 0847498396 Sam Siyonzana.

In other developments we have registered a new web address and are in the process of transferring the old site to the new as we felt the site needed to be revamped. The new address will be :

www.africauniteparty.org

And now to News from the UK...

In the UK our our president has decided to go into voluntary exile on account of the immoral apartheid regime of President Zuma. Mr. Denton stood against apartheid when it wasn't popular. He was arrested for his beliefs and had to leave  South Africa time and again because he was called up to the army and refused to be enlisted. Mr Denton spent this time in exile from 1982-1994 to spread the word about life in an apartheid regime. It was his dream that all would be equal; before the law and all would live together in peace-black and white...

But under Thabo Mbeki in the year 2000 that all changed. Once Mandela and the unity government was history the ANC set about creating racist new laws that discriminated against white people.As a result of this discrimination and racist apartheid policy implemented by the BEE laws and other racist polices the hope that brought South Africa its miracle in 1994...was gone.

In the last 20 years we have seen over 4000 farm murders and around 25000 racially motivated violent deaths.It was generally and is generally ignored by the mainstream media ; but it is nevertheless...a fact.
This party was initially created at the request of those victims of racial violence.However,we were prohibited from standing in the May elections by the corrupt IEC chairperson(who by the way has been sacked )...and even the constitutional court would not hear our legal argument proposed by Hogan Lowells attorneys.

So it was then up to this party to make a decision once again...do we participate in a morally corrupt regime...or not?

In the last 20 years over 1000 000 South Africans have voted with their feet and left the country...perhaps more !

And that should tell you something.Were they all racist? I don't think so. Perhaps they were all sick and tired of empty promises and corrupt officials who once were revolutionaries who cared about the fate of the people...

There are those who will never leave South Africa... but there are those that NEED to leave South Africa - to make others aware of what is happening.

And until the racist laws and President Zuma answers for his crimes... The President of the Africa Unite Party shall not return to South Africa.



But let us return to what the intrepid adventures of Mr. Denton in the UK.As you might see from the above photo we have been test driving the electric car invented by Elon Musk... A South African Billionaire living in Bel Air, Los Angeles, America.

It felt like a horizontal bungy jump as I accelerated from 0- 60mph in 4.2 seconds on a deserted street in London.It is soundless. Doesn't make a sound... I think in a way it could be dangerous because it doesn't warn those it creeps up on... the seats were OK but I felt the neck could have been more supported.I was impressed by the console screen and its features...you can even tune in to the radio station of your choice..I was listening to 702 radio in London...how about that!!

I have a friend in Edinburgh I went to visit- another South African who wont be returning to South Africa because of its racist policies... He like I love south Africa but not what it is doing to its own citizens...

The rate of evolution of consciousness will take another 200 years before all people are equal. It is in the minds and in the hearts of south africans that the change must take place...you cannot blame or scapegoat white people... think about it... if one south african leaves with his or her skills...he takes not just money but possibility... so many south africans have excelled with their ingenuity and expertise..and many have disinvested... why?

Because of the policies of the ANC.

My friend Ian left in the mid 90s and hasn't returned.He is now the proud owner of a string of South African restaurants and is worth several millions...check out ...

www.shebeenbar.co.uk

And I could go on...my sister went to Australia and is making more money now in one day than she made in South Africa as a journalist in one month...

check out www.kindynews.com

And the list goes on..- who are the biggest losers?

The people of South Africa...

who creates wealth?

it is the innovator... the creator of the idea...take the innovation away and you have nothing.

What our mission is as a party is to bring back the confidence into Africa by improving its governance.

Bristol where we are based in Europe was the centre of the slave trade in the world. Preachers like John and Charles Wesley spoke out against slavery and inspired people like William Wilberforce to lobby against and to abolish slavery... they succeeded...and they were both Christians.

Slavery was an Unchristian exercise.

In the first month here in Bristol Ive been trying to find out what Bristol has done to acknowledge its past and reconcile it to the present. Ive been trying to understand if they know what the effects of this crime against humanity were...and how the people of Britain benefited and continue to benefit from the proceeds of this crime.Between 1697 and 1807, 2,108 known ships left Bristol to make the trip to Africa and onwards across the Atlantic with slaves. An average of twenty slaving voyages set sail a year.[5] Approximately 500,000 slaves were brought into slavery by these ships, representing one-fifth of the British slave trade during this time.[5] Profits from the slave trade ranged from 50% to 100% during the early 18th century. Bristol was already a comparatively wealthy city prior to this trade; as one of the three points of the slave triangle (the others being Africa and the West Indies), the city prospered. This triangle was called the Triangular Trade. The Triangular Trade involved delivering, as well receiving, goods from each stop the ship took.


    And the main beneficiaries of this crime were the slavelords who are the current pillars of the establishment.If historical crimes can be prosecuted by the judiciary... eg rolf harris and cliff richards... and the proceeds of crime can be recovered... what then about the slavelords and their children and shareholders???

    I am of course talking about Barclays bank... and others...and why are these criminals Honoured today in Bristol? " COLSTON Tower Colston Hall... Cabot circus... etc.. Black boy hill...

    Between 1698 and 1807, around 2100 slaving related ship voyages sailed out of the port of Bristol and most of them were involved in trading with the American colonies. Visitors to Bristol can discover this dark history at the city's new Harbourside museum, M Shed or on aBristol Pirate Walk. Pero’s Bridge on Bristol's Harbourside, is named after Pero Jones, who was the African servant of a plantation owner. There is also a slave trade walking trail which explores Bristol's historical associations with the slave trade in detail.


    why have the good people of Bristol stuck their heads in the sand????

    here is part the reason...

    Then there is Colston Hall, a major music venue named after Edward Colston, a philanthropist and merchant who paid for several schools, churches and hospitals, many of which survive to this day. Much of Colston's wealth came from the trade – and his investments in the RAC. The Bristol band Massive Attack have pledged never to play at the venue until its name is changed.
    On Corn Street is an impressive, honey-coloured building with a worn stone pl aque proclaiming "the Old Bank". The bank was formed by slave traders and, after being merged with others, went on to become the NatWest.
    Such buildings are testimony to a trade that was conducted with extraordinary vigour. It is estimated that Britain transported more than three million African people across the Atlantic (500,000 on Bristol ships alone), an epic trade that involved some 10,000 voyages and swelled the coffers of the owners. By the Victorian era, as many as one in six of the wealthiest Britons derived at least some of their fortunes from slavery. Few seemed to have any qualms. The Quakers, for example, had been enthusiastic investors.
    "Before 1760, they were up to their eyeballs in it," said Madge Dresser, associate professor in history at the University of the West of England. Later they were in the vanguard of the 19th-century antislavery movement.
    And after abolition finally came, those who had participated – including, as the UCL project reveals, the ancestors of Graham Greene, George Orwell and Elizabeth Barrett Browning – were handsomely compensated for their lost income.
    In 1833 parliament approved the payment of £20m to the former slave owners – 40% of the government's expenditure that year, equivalent to £16bn in today's money. Much of the wealth generated was concentrated in the West Country.

    My first mission was to uncover the past.I met a guy from Equatorial Guinea ... he showed me a secret entrance to a slave cave that was used in the past apparently to house slaves on their transit to America whilst the ships were being provisioned.

    We found a way in but unfortunately it was bricked up...I estimated the bricks at around 50 or 60 years old.

    Later I discovered another cave below an ancient mansion - probably owned by a slavelord...but now donated to the University of West England... - Burwall House...

    I have requested a meeting with the mayor of bristol to discuss these and other issues about how best to move forward and bring unity between the past and the future... between Africa and Europe... and I have also been in contact with some key African leaders...

    Our aim is to acquire a building that can be converted into an Africa Centre or embassy of a United States or Nations of Africa.

    I would also like to see a scholarship fund created for the best and brightest of African peoples.

    Theres a lot of work to heal the wounds created by slavery ,colonisation and imperialism... it is an ongoing blight upon the people of Africa...and that is why we need to UNITE...that is why ALL Africans from the South to the North..from the West to The East ..and all of our africans in the diaspora in the Caribbean and in the Americas...and elsewhere around the planet need to feel that these great injustices are being dealt with...

    The AUP and the AUM is an organisation that seeks to redress the imbalances of the past... it seeks to heal the divisions created by the evils of APARTHEID AND POVERTY... it seeks to generate a new dawn in africa that will empower and release all Africans into a greater future for all...but to do that we need to get rid of the "houseniggers..."

    The Bank of England, set up in 1694, made capital available for slave voyages and the City became the financial centre of the slave trade. Alexander and David Barclay were Quaker slave traders who operated in the West Indies, and founded Barclay’s Bank on slave trade profits. Sir Francis Baring whose family eventually founded Barings Bank, had major financial interests in slavery. Today Baring Road in Lewisham south east London is named after him.

    The footprint of slavery can also be seen in the world of art, culture, and religion. The Church of England was heavily involved in the transatlantic slave trade. In February 2006, the Church voted to apologise to the descendants of victims of the slave trade, ‘recognising the damage done’ to those enslaved.
    I use this word as it was used in the deep south by african slaves ...of themselves...and NOT in a racist manner...when i talk about House-nigger I talk about those that have capitulated to greed and sold out the principles of the struggle which is the freedom of all africans...black and white, brown and yellow...ALL african peoples...and in a socialist viewpoint of thinking that includes all those who are impoverished by the decadent society we live in today that oppresses one man over another making him a wage slave...

    SO THE STRUGGLE FOR FREEDOM AND JUSTICE CONTINUES...

    As part of this struggle we have been protesting against the violence we see in the Middle East...particularly in Gaza which is geographically and part of the African continent and part of this struggle to bring justice and peace for all.

    The Africa Unite Party will continue to fight for the rights of the oppressed and stand against the powerful and rich who do not care about their fellow man.

    The struggle Continues!!!






















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