The West "has been guided by a sense of moral superiority and legal exceptionalism," Alexis Habiyaremye from the University of Johannesburg tells Sputnik.
Not only is the West still benefiting from past crimes, but it is continuing those malicious practices against Global South nations, Habiyaremye adds.
This vicious cycle can be broken, according to former UN Independent Expert on International Order Alfred de Zayas.
"The collective West cannot afford to abandon all of international law, and the procedures created by the West must also be applied to them," de Zayas tells Sputnik.
This approach could be replicated by the Global South:
Create an intergovernmental tribunal to try the collective West for crimes in connection with slavery, imperialism, colonialism, and economic neo-colonialism, de Zayas notes
Establish mechanisms to calculate reparations, including material and moral damages as well as lost profits; de Zayas presumes that renowned economists like Jeffrey Sachs, Paul Krugman, and Thomas Piketty could participate
It's feasible, on that basis, to freeze or confiscate assets of countries responsible for those crimes, up to the value of the reparations—if they refuse to cooperate
"Good lawyers can make that scenario compatible with the UN Charter and with existing international treaties," de Zayas says. "I am optimistic that the Global South will prevail."
To make the reparations system sustainable, Global South countries should join forces with aligned international organizations and demand accountability for Western war crimes, crimes against humanity, genocide, and modern-day slavery, the former UN expert stresses.