Bell Ribeiro-Addy

Bellavia Janet Ribeiro-Addy (born 1 March 1985) is a British Labour Party politician who is the Member of Parliament (MP) for Clapham and Brixton Hill since 2024, and previously for Streatham from 2019 until its abolition in 2024. In 2020, she was briefly Shadow Minister for Immigration. She chairs the All-Party Parliamentary Group for Afrikan Reparations.

At the 2024 general election, Ribeiro-Addy was re-elected as a Labour Party MP, winning in the constituency of Clapham and Brixton Hill.

Early life and education
Bellavia Ribeiro-Addy was born on 1 March 1985 in Streatham, south London, growing up in a working-class family on a council estate on Brixton Hill. She is of Ghanaian descent.

She attended the private Streatham and Clapham High School on a scholarship. Ribeiro-Addy then graduated with a Bachelor of Science degree in Biomedical Science with Ethics & Philosophy of Science from the University of Bradford in 2006. She then completed a Master of Arts degree in Medical Law & Ethics at Queen Mary University of London, awarded in 2007, and a Graduate Diploma in Law at BPP Law School, awarded in 2015.

She was the National Black Students' Officer for the National Union of Students (NUS) from 2008 to 2010, national co-ordinator of the Student Assembly Against Racism, and the national convenor of the NUS' Anti-Racism/Anti-Fascism campaign. In 2010, she and LGBT+ officer Daf Adley pushed the Durham Union Society to cancel a debate on multiculturalism, threatening to bus coaches of students to Durham for a "colossal demonstration" if British National Party MEP Andrew Brons were to speak on campus.

She has described herself as a "life-long socialist". Ribeiro-Addy was chief of staff to former Labour frontbencher Diane Abbott from 2016 to 2019.

Parliamentary career
At the 2019 general election, Ribeiro-Addy was elected to Parliament as MP for Streatham with 54.8% of the vote and a majority of 17,690 votes. Ribeiro-Addy in her maiden speech called for some form of reparations to former colonial subjects, and spoke of the injustices faced by black people in Britain. In one of her first news interviews as an MP, she called for the decriminalisation of homosexuality in Ghana, stating that it is her duty to make sure all people are free, and not discriminated against.

In January 2020, Ribeiro-Addy was appointed as Shadow Minister for Immigration, just weeks after her election as a member of parliament. She was not retained in the role following the election of Sir Keir Starmer as Labour leader.

In February 2020, she challenged the role of the media in devaluing black female MPs, particularly regarding errors by BBC Parliament and other outlets involving the mislabelling of photos of black female Labour MPs Marsha de Cordova and Dawn Butler.

During the COVID-19 pandemic, in March 2020, Ribeiro-Addy called on the government to release people held in immigration detention centres.

Ribeiro-Addy supported adopting a Zero-COVID strategy to combat the COVID-19 pandemic and wrote an article in June 2021 in support of delaying the lifting of lockdown, criticised a "vaccine only" approach and called for the continuation of restrictions until case numbers reach zero. In December 2021, she voted against the introduction of vaccine passports and mandatory vaccination of NHS staff.

Ribeiro-Addy – whose first UK-born black relative was Thomas Birch Freeman, born in Twyford, Hampshire, in 1809 – has called for better black history education in schools, saying in October 2021: "Our civil rights struggle here in the UK is not one that we learn about as much."

On 24 February 2022, following the 2022 Russian invasion of Ukraine, Ribeiro-Addy was one of 11 Labour MPs threatened with losing the party whip after they signed a statement by the Stop the War Coalition which questioned the legitimacy of NATO and accused the military alliance of "eastward expansion". All 11 MPs subsequently removed their signatures.

In the 2019–24 Parliament, she chaired the All-Party Parliamentary Group for Afrikan Reparations. In August 2023, Ribeiro-Addy argued for revision of the British Museum Act 1963, which currently prevents exhibits such as the Benin bronzes and the Parthenon marbles from being returned to their countries of origin.

Due to the 2023 Periodic Review of Westminster constituencies, Ribeiro-Addy's constituency of Streatham was abolished, and replaced with Clapham and Brixton Hill. In January 2024, she was selected to contest Clapham and Brixton Hill at the 2024 general election.

On 4 July 2024, Ribeiro-Addy was elected as Labour Party MP for the Clapham and Brixton Hill constituency with 56.5% of the vote.

Personal life
Ribeiro-Addy served as a school governor at Saint Gabriel's College, Camberwell, from 2018 to 2022.

She is a Christian.