About 35 papers were presented by scholars who are endowed in their respectable fields. They came from different universities and organisations around the world. The 15 countries in attendance were the Netherlands, United States, Trinidad and Tobago , Suriname, Gabon, Kenya, United Kingdom, Jamaica, St Lucia, Zambia , Israel , South Africa , Canada and Nigeria .
CBAAC partnered with the Pan-African Strategic and Policy Research Group (Panastrag) in collaboration with the faculty of Humanities and Education University of West Indies, St. Augustine Trinidad and Tobago as well as the institute for Research on the African Diaspora in America and the Caribbean (IRADAC), The City College, New York. The papers presented examined the universal issues that have deterred the development of Africa as a continent and African Diaspora.
Reflecting on the history of the slave trade that happened 430 years ago, as Professor Tunde Babawale said such memory leaves a scar where man becomes an essential product to be shipped across the shores of Africa for economical enrichment.
Professor Babawale sees these gruesome experience as exploitation that has crippled Africa politically and the retrogression of African culture. Babawale pointed out the impediment of cultural imperialism that has become a pest in Africa . He however said that this phenomenon must be fenced to save African cultural heritage.
Since the problem is a common challenge that bemoans the African continent, Babawale said that was what spurred the theme for the conference. The conference, which began at 7 p.m., had in attendance, the Prime Minister of Trinidad and Tobago , Honourable Patrick Manning, and Mr. Buba Tekune - Hie Nigerian acting high commissioner to Trinidad and Tobago and the Registrar of the University of West Indies .
At the opening ceremony, Honourable Manning stated by commending the organizers to have chosen his home (Trinidad and Tobago) as venue for the conference. Adding that it would help strengthen the relationship of the African Union with the global African Diaspora. On their part, the minister said the Republic of Trinidad and Tobago has gone extra miles in working relationships with many African countries in the area of communication, energy, sports and culture
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