By Witness Radio team,
Lusaka, Zambia: The 4th African Forum on Business and Human Rights has commenced with a call to promote inclusive economic development that will bring about holistic change across the continent.
This year’s event, themed ‘From Commitment to Action: Advancing Remedy, Reparations, and Responsible Business Conduct in Africa,’ underscores the crucial transition from mere pledges to tangible actions. This marks the fourth consecutive sitting after the first in Accra, Ghana, the second in Addis Ababa, Ethiopia, and the third in Nairobi, Kenya, in 2024, demonstrating the Forum’s unwavering commitment to the cause.
Representing the President of the Republic of Zambia, H.E. Hakainde Hichilema, Zambian Justice Minister Princess Kasune stated that Africa is presently at a crossroads due to increased investment in agribusiness, the extractive industry, and infrastructural development, which compromises human dignity, environmental conservation, and respect for the land and human rights of the African people.
“We are meeting here in Lusaka in 2025 at a time when local communities in Africa are experiencing displacement, mineral extraction is contaminating waterbodies on which communities survive on, rights denied at the expense of economic development” this has to stop, she noted that there’s a wide gap of what the African communities are experiencing and with what anchored in corporate responsibility frameworks.
She said Africa has a wealth of minerals, arable land, and other natural resources that must be protected and not exploited at the expense of the dignity and rights of African communities, or at the cost of degrading the environment and the ecosystem.
Kasune criticized officials from African governments who attend negotiation tables with investors as if they were beggars and fail to secure better deals that benefit the African people. She emphasized the need for stronger negotiation power, which would ultimately prevent these unfavorable deals from displacing communities from their ancestral lands.
“We cannot come to the business tables as if we are begging. We are co-partners and must negotiate effectively on behalf of the citizens of the African continent, strengthening their voices to demand accountability when things are not going well. We have so many resources to offer, which are needed by the so-called big nations that can take the entire African continent to a middle-class income status, where our citizens can enjoy a decent standard of living,” said Kasune.
The African continent has documented many cases where African citizens are ordered to vacate their lands in the days before consultation or without proper resettlement and fair compensation.
Kasune reported that on the continent, some cultural chiefs connive with investors and sell communities’ lands at a cost regarded as a handout/ keep pocket change rate (very low), and revealed that Zambia is in the process of finalizing the development of the first National Action Plan on Business and human rights to promote responsible business conduct in the country, a step towards a more equitable future.
Zambia is joining a list of several countries on the continent, such as Uganda, Kenya, Nigeria, and Liberia, that have adopted and now implement National Action Plans (NAPs) on Business and Human Rights. Others, such as Ghana, Ethiopia, Malawi, Mozambique, Tanzania, and Zimbabwe, are in various stages of developing their NAPs.
The overall goal of a National Action Plan on Business and Human Rights (NAP) is to implement the UN Guiding Principles on Business and Human Rights by outlining a government’s strategy to ensure that businesses respect human rights and that effective remedies are available when abuses occur.
The Forum, scheduled to run from October 7th to 9th, 2025, aims to strengthen access to remedies, advance reparations, and develop effective strategies to prevent irresponsible investments such as land grabbing and environmental degradation on the continent, among other objectives.