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Wednesday, May 29, 2019

Lawyers tell Cameroon Prime Minister: “Unitary decentralized state is dead and buried”

 Cameroon’s Prime Minister ,Joseph Dion Ngute ,was recently in Buea sent by President Paul Biya on a peace and dialogue-seeking mission towards resolving the Anglophone Crisis ,and he met with many groups among which was Fako Lawyers’ Association(FAKLA).
Following is said to be a leaked memo by FAKLA to the premier in which, among other things, the prime Minister is told that a “unitary decentralized state is dead and buried”.
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 MEMORANDUM PRESENTED TO THE PRIME MINISTER HEAD OFGOVERNMENT ON THE OCCASION OF HIS MAIDEN VISIT AS PRIME MINISTER TO THE SOUTH WEST REGION BY LAWYERS IN FAKO DIVISION
Your Excellency,
Permit us to begin by congratulating you on your brilliant appointment as Prime Minister (PM) of the Republic of Cameroon. We pray that the good Lord will guard and guide you in this rather daunting task. Your visit to this region comes at a time when the socio-political atmosphere is tense. Our lives have been affected by three years of socio-political crisis turn to war. It is therefore of paramount importance that we urgently begin to look for solutions. As lawyers, meeting with the PM affords us another opportunity to present some of our urgent   challenges   both   in   the   administration   of   justice   and   peaceful   co-existence   in   our communities. We therefore propose to make this presentation in two parts.
- The plight of the Common Law Lawyers, and
- The socio-political Crisis in Cameroon
In dealing with these issues, we propose to dwell more on the way forward rather than on the causes. Except, of course, where recapitulating will help in comprehension.
I. THE PLIGHT OF THE COMMON LAW LAWS.
Your Excellency, the Common Law Lawyers in this country have over the past three decades, sent a plethora of Memoranda to government decrying the systematic and deliberate efforts to crush our system of justice. Things came to a head in 2016 when in a bid to discuss our difficulties, we scheduled two meetings in Bamenda and Buea, for the 8th and 10th of October 2016. We were prevented from accessing the court of Appeal premises in Bamenda causing lawyers to descend on the streets in Bamenda. The meeting scheduled for Buea on  the 10th was aborted when a marauding police unit dispatched from Douala, invaded the territory, pulled  lawyers  from  their   cars   and   subjecting   them   to   the   most   humiliating   torture   ever dreamt of.  Lawyers’ wigs and gowns were seized and to this day, not even an apology has been tendered even though the wigs and gowns are with the Divisional officer of Buea. This is to demonstrate that it was a well-planned and executed government scheme designed to subdue Common Law Lawyers now and forever.

Now that you are here, permit us outline some of those issues that Common lawyers have been decrying over the years.
1. Appointment of Notaries:
For some time now, attempts have been made to appoint notaries in Anglophone Cameroon. We decry this for the following reasons. First and foremost, by our training, we are trained as advocates, solicitors and Notaries. We have practiced in this manner since independence. We have been serving our people well and there is no public clamour for change, safe from those who want to take away our jobs and subject our people to hardship. Secondly, the concept of appointing Notaries is a civil Law concept, therefore we see any attempt in that direction as a deliberate and calculated attack on Anglophones in this country.
2. Stop Harmonization.
We have noted with dismay that the policy of harmonization is a deliberate strategy to frenchify all Anglophones in this country. It is therefore our position that the government put an immediate stop to the policy of harmonisation. Laws must not be harmonised. We should be proud of our diverse legal cultures and work hard to strengthen each component of our system rather than kill the common Law. Under the guise of harmonisation, we have seen our most cherished Law of Evidence scrapped in criminal matters. We have seen the standard of proof in criminal matters move from an objective   standard   of   “beyond   reasonable   doubts” to the   subjective   standard   of   “beyond doubts” (a near impossibility in law). We have seen the means of proof reduced to proof by any means. (Which may include evidence received through torture and other forms of duress).
Harmonisation must therefore be stopped forthwith. The continuous attempt at Harmonisation is a mockery of the Common Law Division at the Supreme Court.
3.The Invasion of our Courts by Civil Law Magistrates.
The quality of justice dispensed in our courts today, leaves much to be desired. Most of our courts and legal departments are manned by French speaking civil law trained magistrates. In fact, as we speak, the number of French speaking civil law trained magistrates in the region surpasses the number of Common law trained magistrates in Anglophone Cameroon.  In fact we have had incidents were judgments are delivered in French in Anglophone Cameroon. There is no other word to describe this than a policy of ASSIMILATION. The only way to stop this assimilation is to replace these judges and magistrates with Common law trained judges. This is even more urgent when we take into consideration the fact that a Common Law Division has been created in the Supreme Court.
4. Stop the Impending CODE CIVILE
Your Excellency, are Anglophones a colonised people? Why must our laws be scrapped and civil law imposed on us? The Final process of assimilation will be completed once the muted Code Civile will be enacted into law. What is wrong with our laws that they must be diluted by an inferior system. You may rest assured that Common Law Lawyers are ready to resist such a Code Civil with all our might. We are ready to start the second phase of the struggle that we began in 2016 if the said Code Civile is enacted into Law.
Your Excellency, we could go on and on enumerating our challenges, however, we believe that   the   above   4   examples   give   you   a   bird’s   eye view   of   our   frustrations   and   also   our determination.
In the face of these difficulties, Common Law Lawyers in 2015 proposed that to ensure that our system and our people are protected and reassured, we must return to the 1961 federal structure of the country. To this plea, we received no responses other than brutality. The intransigence of government at the time is the result of three years of crisis and a fratricidal war. Today's, so much water has gone under the bridge and lives have been lost. Whole villages have   been   wiped   out,   hundreds   of   thousands   displaced;   tens   of   thousands   have   become refugees. The responses so far by government have been peripheral, halfhearted, grossly insufficient and even a denial of the problem. With your coming into government, there is hope for a new beginning. We therefore feel compelled to contribute our views as to the way forward.
If government   is serious about resolving this problem once and for all, it must recognize that the period of intimidation, blackmail and divide and rule is over. At least amongst Anglophones. Government must at all times know that Anglophones will not stop at any thing until they achieve self-determination. A unitary decentralized state is dead and buried.   Whether   it   will   be   internal   or   external   self-determination   will   be   the   result   of negotiations between the component parts of this country. As lawyers, we wish to limit ourselves for now on the confidence- building measures that must be put in place to facilitate trust toward working together in the search for a viable solution.
1. Release All Prisoners of the Anglophone Crisis.
This is a condition sine qua non to any hopes for any frank and trust worthy negotiations. Sissuku Ayuk Tabe and his team now represent the face of the revolution and any purported negotiations not sanctioned by them are bound to fail. For them to be fully involved in the negotiations, they need to be free people. But as you must be aware, Sissuku Ayuk Tabe will not proceed to negotiate if other Anglophones arrested because of this crisis are in detention.
2. Demilitarise Anglophone cameroon
The number of soldiers in our communities is so disproportionate and terrorising to our populations. Most of them, and in fact whole units can only communicate in french. This creates animosity with the civilian population. If government is serious, about resolving this crisis, it should demilitarise Anglophone Cameroon. This is a necessary step.
3. Grant General Amnesty
There is the need for a general and unconditional amnesty to all the Anglophone leaders of the crises. Without an amnesty, it will be impossible for Anglophones to be properly represented by those they trust. The present crop of Ministers, Parliamentarians, Senators and Directors have lost the support of the average Anglophone populace that they cannot be trusted to represent their interest.
4. Solicit the services of a mediator.
They history of Cameroon is replete with deceit by the francophone led government for the past  57  years.   At every  turn   and corner,   government  business is   conducted  in the   most secretive manner. Lies telling and corruption are the other of the day. It is difficult therefore for anglophones to trust in the word of the francophone dominated government. One broken promise after another is the hallmark of our experience with the government. Two examples will suffice. When Southern Cameroons sought to join the Republic of Cameron in a referendum in 1961, the agreement was that Cameroon will be a federal state. In fact, the constitution of the Republic of Cameroon was amended by their national Assembly to provide for a federal
structure of governance. Section 47 of that Constitution provided that the form of the state will never be amended. Barely 11 years after, the Ahidjo government imposed a unitary state in Cameroon which has brought us to where we are today.
In 1990, after the students strikes in the university of Yaounde, two new universities were created by a prime ministerial decree. An Anglo-Saxon University in Buea and the University of   Ngoundere   for   Francophones.   True   to   the   Anglo-Saxon   tradition,   the   statutes   of   the University   of  Buea   were   produced   and   the   admission   criteria   set   out.   It   provided   that, admission into the University of Buea was conditioned on 5 Ordinary Level papers including English and two Advanced Level papers in one sitting. This made the University of Buea an enviable institution. Today, and beginning from the 2018-2019 academic  year, admission conditions have been watered down. Now a candidate can gain admission with 4 Ordinary Level papers and two Advanced level papers in two or more sittings.
This is how the government breaks its promises every time and the people wallow in misery. It is therefore important that for any meaningful process to be sustainable, a mediator must be appointed by both sides. This will assure the Anglophones that the government is ready to resolve the crisis. It is our view that the above measures will rekindle confidence in the Anglophones and may lead them to trust the process.
We wish to assure your Excellency of our continuous availability to contribute our own views towards getting us out of the present quack mire.
Accept Your Excellency, our most distinguished regards.
Benjamin ENOW AGBOR,
President Fako Lawyers Association.

Tuesday, May 28, 2019

Anglophone Crisis: Paramount Chief-designate says Buea is not for separation !

By Christopher Ambe

The Paramount Chief-designate of Buea, Dr. Robert Esuka Endeley, has said, based on his consultations, Buea people don’t want separation as a solution to the Anglophone crisis.
     Dr. Endeley, who recently bagged a PhD in Cyber Security from Capital Technology University,USA  and was one of less than five  chiefs who took part in celebrations marking the 47th National Day at the Independence Square in Buea, spoke  to reporters on May 22 in the Southwest Regional capital.
Paramount Chief-designate R.E.Endeley
  The Paramount Chief-designate, who had been received in audience by Prime Minister Chief Joseph Dion Ngute on the latter’s recent peace mission to Buea, appreciated the down-to-earth leadership style of the premier. He even likened Dion Ngute’s leadership style to that of Dr. EML Endeley,a noted West Cameroon Politician
 “We in the Northwest and Southwest regions are particularly happy because the style of leadership of Prime Minster Dion Ngute was the style of leadership that my father Dr.EML Endeley, practiced in politics   in West Cameroon. He went down and talked to the common man  on the street” as the premier has been doing.
 The Paramount Chief-designate expressed happiness that the PM said Government was ready for dialogue on anything except separation, to resolve the Anglophone crisis.    
Dr.Endeley insisted that “the people I represent” are against separation.
“If you interview [my people] they will tell you they don’t want separation”, he said. “We are very comfortable with the PM’s message of peace and dialogue”

The traditional ruler urged separatist fighters in the bush to heed the “PM’s message of hope and come out of the bushes and let us solve this problem once and for all.
“It is nobody’s joy that some people are sleeping in the house and others are in the bush…I am pleading with them to come out. This time it looks like dialogue is imminent and real.”
Asked how he felt when Buea traditional rulers boycotted the 47th National Day celebration despite his appeal for them to take part in the celebration, Dr. Endeley quipped: 

 “Nobody owns May 20.It is a national day. It belongs to the state.
“I have always said that you don’t burn down your primary school because you don’t like your headboy.Your head boy may be changed the following day and your school will still be there.
“We as leaders have to take decisions that are above the shallow perspective of some people.
“If we have to do peace and reconciliation as the PM said, it starts with us the leaders.
“I could not have done otherwise because I stand at the helm of the chiefdom in Buea, and when I met the PM he asked me to help him bring peace in Buea.That is the reconciliation that has started”
It would be recalled that many Southwest Chiefs boycotted the national day celebration as a protest to a call allegedly made on April 25 by Southwest Governor Bernard Okalia Bilai for them to march past on May 20, followed by their various  subjects, failing which they would be dethroned.

But the president of the Southwest Chiefs Conference (SWECC), Chief Mafany Njie Martin, in an April 30th press statement described the gubertorial call “as appalling and inappropriate” and concluded:
"We the Southwest Chiefs categorically condemn the demeaning and threatening manner by which the Governor of the Southwest Region reminded us of our usual civic duties, which we have always performed so diligently without being ordered to so by whosoever.” 
The Paramount Chief-designate, who is a software security engineer and part-time university don, told reporters that now that he has defended his PhD, he would return to Cameroon and help enormously in nation-building.
Asked if any other chiefs confronted him for taking part in celebrating the national day while many boycotted it, Dr Endeley remarked:
“I met with some of them on the Friday before May 20 and I spoke to them and they told me their grievances.
“I tried to explain to them my own perspective and tried to listen to them. Like I said negotiation is an ongoing thing.
“We are talking and I am sure before long we will all be at peace with each other”
Dr. Robert Esuka Endeley was elected over a year as the paramount chief-designate of Buea, to replace Chief SML Endeley who died on July 7, 2015.
A prime ministerial decision is expected to confirm him as the Paramount Chief of Buea for him to start enjoying all the rights and privileges that go with the royal office.

(This report also appears in The Horizon Newspaper,Cameroon,of May 28,2019)






Cameroon:CRTV Buea Station Manager Knighted

By Belibi Armelle*

 Kange Williams Ndiva Wasaloko:Knighted



The Station Manager of CRTV Buea has been raised to the rank of Knight of Cameroon Order of Valour, for his patriotic contribution to nation-building.

Kange Williams Ndiva Wasaloko, who is also a veteran journalist, was decorated with a medal to that effect, last May 20 at Buea Bongo Square by Southwest Governor Bernard Okalia Bilai, on behalf of the State, during celebrations marking the 47th edition of Cameroon’s national day.
This year’s national day was celebrated under the theme “Unity in Diversity, a major asset of the Cameroonian people in their determined move towards emergence”
The station manager was among over thirty others who were awarded medals for their valuable services to the nation.
Reacting to the honor given him, Mr.Kange noted, “I feel happy, considering that we are working at a difficult terrain. And for the State to recognize [our sustained efforts], calls for celebration”
Mr. Kange who joined CRTV in 1996, has served at the state broadcaster’s Yaounde FM 94, served as Chief of News in CRTV Bertoua, and worked as Senior Reporter at CRTV National Station before being appointed as CRTV Buea Station Manager in June 2017, in the heat of the Anglophone crisis.
Mr. kange is credited for launching new radio programs such as ISSUES (an interactive slot) and participating in some journalistically to ensure the desired goals are achieved.
He has appealed to journalists both of the private and public to be exemplary in the discharge of their professional duties, especially with the ongoing Anglophone crisis.
“We are living a crisis which is not of our making, and as media people we need to educate the public on the dangers of war and  the merits of living in peace”, he observed.
* Belibi Armelle is a University of Buea (Cameroon) Journalism student     
(This report also appears in The Horizon Newspaper,Cameroon,of Tuesday May 28,2019)                




Tuesday, May 21, 2019

In Search of Peaceful Solution to Cameroon Anglophone Crisis:

PM insists guns don’t dialogue, people do

Prime Minister Joseph Dion Ngute addressing crowd infront of Limbe City Hall on Anglophone crisis

By Christopher Ambe

In search of a peaceful solution to the almost three-year old Anglophone Crisis, Prime Minister and Head of Government, Chief Dr.Joseph Dion Ngute, emissary of President Biya to the restive Northwest and Southwest regions, demonstrated that humility is a hallmark of leadership by meeting many micro and macro groups with the Head of State’s urgent call for peace and dialogue.

Meeting with groups and knowledgeable individuals, Mr.Biya’s envoy also stockpiled proposals for resolving the deepening crisis.

The premier, who was, last week, in the Southwest region for a four-day peace consultations- after a similar one in the Northwest,regretted that, the Anglophone crisis, which snowballed into deadly fighting between Anglophone separatists and government forces, has had its toll on citizens- sending hundreds of them early to their graves, and wrecking the  economies of two regions in a particular and Cameroon by extension.

 According to rights groups, since the eruption of the crisis in October 2016 violence has killed about 2,000 people in Cameroon’s two English regions; about  half a million people are internally displaced, hundreds of villages burnt and property worth billions of Fcfa damaged.

The crisis has provoked a serious humanitarian crisis, which the Biya government and international bodies are still grappling with.

On his four-day peace mission to Buea,Limbe and Kumba,towns in Southwest Region, Prime Minister  Dion Ngute disclosed that President Biya is now more than ready to engage in  meaningful and inclusive dialogue –even with separatists, to bring the crisis to a quick end.

The Cameroon government had attempted dialogue at the early stage of the crisis   but suddenly resorted to a crackdown on advocates of the independence of Anglophones, and the latter have been fighting back in self-defense.

On his meet-the-people tour, the soft-spoken premier informed his varied audiences wherever he went that, even though Mr. Biya is now willing to dialogue, the President who has ruled Cameroon since 1982 has insistently said separation or secession won’t be on the agenda.

“The President has asked me to tell you that there will be no separation because Cameroon is one and a united country. Any other problems that the children in the bushes have will be looked into; please tell all of them to come out of the bushes, because guns don’t dialogue but people do. Let them come out for the dialogue.

 “The President has asked me to tell you that he is not happy that children are living in bushes, facing danger and all kinds of problems for no reason; that they should leave the bushes, drop their arms and return to their homes for safety”, Dion Ngute told a cheering crowd, in front of the Limbe City Council Hall, in Pidgin English, to better drive home the president’s message.

He had,a day before, delivered same to a large crowd at Buea Mountain Hotel,where lodged during the visit.

 “The President has asked me to tell you that he has ambition for young people in the Northwest and Southwest Regions;that he will order special recruitments for the fighters who surrender,” he said .

The PM appealed to parents to shun school boycott and send back their children to school, come September 2019.

“I congratulate the people of Limbe for saying “No to school boycott, “the PM said in response to the Government Delegate of Limbe City Council ,Andrew Motanga,who  boasted his city had since rejected ghost town and school boycott, called by separatists.

The PM lamented that in Southwest and Northwest schools are not functional. “Less than 20% of schools in these regions operate, even when education is key to success in life.”

Dion Ngute appealed to armed separatists lurking in bushes to drop their guns and come out for gainful employment and reintegration into society.

The PM called on chiefs, many of whom have abandoned their villages because of the hostility of separatist fighters towards them, to return to their chiefdoms and persuade the combatants to voluntarily surrender, in exchange for government protection and jobs.

In Kumba, some 23 “separatists” who reportedly surrendered were presented to the Premier, who was, in turn, happy with their turning over a new leaf.

Fonju Bernard, Southwest West Regional Coordinator for the center of Disarmament, Demobilization and Reintegration  Center (DDR),whose Buea office Dion Ngute visited on Friday,said,“We already had 21 ex-combatants including the last one who came two weeks before the prime Minister visited the Center.”

As the PM met with professional, religious, political and socio-cultural groups, collecting proposals in view of resolving the crisis, the release of Sesekou Ayuk Julius and others in detention or prison in connection with the ongoing crisis, the demilitarization of the two regions, dialogue with leading activists in the Disapora and general amnesty were prominent.

Emerging from an audience with the PM in Buea, Chief Ekoka Molindo,Vice-President of Southwest Chief Confrence,who led the Southwest traditional rulers for it, noted, “The Southwest is behind President Biya to ensure peace returns soonest”

Speaking in Limbe,Chief Atem Ebako,former Secretary-General of SWECC, told the PM that the crisis has offered an opportunity for the putting in place of a system of governance,where the people can identify their problems and choose their leaders to govern them.

Also speaking in Limbe,Senator Mbella Moki,noted that Dion Ngute’s down-t-earth approach made him the voice of moderation in the current crisis situation.

The Senator condemned disunity among Southwest Elite, calling for unity of purpose to help resolve the crisis and insisting that the region must now be the game changer.

The eloquence with which Mbella Moki presented his views, prompted the PM to note that the senator spoke with the oratory of Winston Churchill, a British writer, former prime Minister and statesman.

 But for light gunshots at Buea Mile 17 reportedly by armed separatists in the morning of last Friday, the fourth and last day of the premier’s visit to the Southwest region, his peace mission was generally described as a huge success.

The Head of Government was accompanied to the Southwest by some Members of Government who included but not limited to: Deputy Secretary-General at the Presidency Elung Paul Che, Minister of Secondary Education, Dr. Nalova Lyonga and Minister-Delegate for MINEPAT,Paul Tasong.

(This report also appears in THE HORIZON Newspaper, Cameroon,of May 21,2019)

 

 

Wednesday, May 15, 2019

Cameroon crisis risks spiralling out of control: UN aid chief


© MARCO LONGARI Separatists have launched an armed campaign in Cameroon's two anglophone regions -- the government has responded with a crackdown
The crisis in Cameroon is worsening and threatens to spiral out of control, the UN aid chief warned Monday during a first informal meeting of the Security Council on the conflict.
At least 4.3 million people are in need of aid -- a 30 percent increase from last year in what Mark Lowcock described as an "under-reported" crisis in the central African country.
Cameroon is wracked by a conflict between separatists and government forces in its English-speaking west, combined with an influx of refugees from the Central African Republic and Nigeria.

"Both the humanitarian and the security situation continue to deteriorate and run the risk of spiraling out of control," Lowcock, the under-secretary-general for humanitarian affairs, told the council.
"The level of the crisis today is more alarming than ever."
More than 560,000 people have been driven from their homes since 2017 including 32,000 who have fled to Nigeria. The violence from the Boko Haram insurgency in Nigeria has spilled over to Cameroon.
The United States, joined by Germany, Britain and the Dominican Republic, organized the meeting on Cameroon, but African countries made clear they were skeptical of the new focus.
Equatorial Guinea's Ambassador Anatolio Ndong Mba, speaking on behalf of the three African countries on the council, warned that the humanitarian crisis should not be "politicized".
The crisis is not a threat to international peace and "the situation should therefore be tackled by the government of Cameroon with genuine support from the international community," said Mba.
China and Russia also warned against UN meddling in Cameroon's affairs.
- Neglected crisis -
Rights groups have accused the United Nations of ignoring the conflict in Cameroon, where separatists in English-speaking regions are pushing for independence from the majority French-speaking country.
The government has responded with a crackdown, deploying thousands of soldiers.
More than 200 members of the security forces and at least 500 civilians have been killed, according to figures from the International Crisis Group, a think-tank.
Cameroon's Ambassador Michel Tommo Monthe defended his government's handling of the conflict, saying Yaounde was "facing secessionism, facing terrorism" but was "on its feet, standing tall."
Cameroon's Prime Minster Joseph Dion Ngute traveled to the anglophone region last week, offering dialogue but making clear that independence was not an option.
Jan Egeland, head of the Norwegian Refugee Council and a former UN aid chief, said the crisis in the English-speaking part of Cameroon was "one of the world's most neglected".
"The lack of information and international political attention has allowed the situation to deteriorate from peaceful demonstrations to the atrocities committed by both sides," he told the council.
Egeland called for scaling up diplomatic efforts to prevent the violence from worsening and a "massive injection" of funds to support relief work.
Source:AFP


The Benefits of EU Membership

   By Henry  Nakie Kulu* 
The European Union (EU) can be described as both a super national and intergovernmental organization of 28 member states which was established after the Second World War with the aim of ending the frequent and bloody wars between European countries, and preventing future wars
The EU with common social, economic and security policies, was formed on November 1, 1993 by six countries namely Germany, France, Luxemburg, Belgium, Italy and the Netherlands. Their aim was to promote peace and unity within Europe after the Second World War.
It has 24 working languages and its official currency is the Euro with its affiliated  countries being Serbia, Albania, Macedonia, Montenegro and Turkey.
Any Country interested in joining the EU must have a government that guarantees democracy, human rights, the rule of law as well as protect the rights of the minorities; also, the country must have a market economy that is strong enough to stand on its own within the competitive EU market and lastly the county must be willing to adhere to the objectives of the EU.
Becoming a member of the Union comes with several benefits.
 The EU has ensured the abolition of all border controls to provide the free movement of people    from one member state to another without visas; this has made it easy to work study or travel from one Member County to another. Since the EU was created its main economic engine, which is the single market, has led to the free movement of goods, services and money from one member country to another.
Furthermore, the EU has made it possible that all member states have good health care services, good educational system and the right to security for all citizens.
 The EU has also encouraged scientific and technological developments in order to improve the living standards of member countries. It has also helped to modernize all member states and even non-member countries like Turkey, Switzerland and Norway.
 Politically, the EU has helped reduce tension among member states and the world as whole thereby averting wars among member countries, which is considered as the biggest achievement of the Union.
          In my opinion, the benefits of being an EU member make the Union a very worthwhile organization and a great force to reckon with.
*Henry Nakie Kulu is a Cameroonian and an MA student of  International Relations & Political Sciences ,Istanbul  Aydin University 

Sunday, May 12, 2019

Celebrated Lawyer Takes Cameroon's Prime Minister To Task Over Dialogue on Anglophone Crisis


MR PRIME MINISTER, SIR,THIS IS ACELEBRATION OF
 GENOCIDE AND NOT DIALOGUE
By Charles Taku*
Barrister Charles Taku
Dr. Dione Ngute was the agent representing LRC at the hearing of the case brought on behalf of the Southern Cameroons by Dr Gwang Gumne and others in the African Commission on Human and Peoples' Rights. Judgement in the case was rendered in Banjul, the Gambia during the 45th Ordinary Session that held from 13 - 27 May 2009.
In the Judgment that was subsequently endorsed by the General Assembly of African leaders during the AU conference in Sirtre in Libya, the African Commission unequivocally called for dialogue to resolve the crisis and offered its services to facilitate the dialogue. It gave LRC 180 days to comply with its Judgment. It is on the records of the African Commission that LRC asked for an extension of time to comply with the Judgment.
Mr. Prime Minister, true to itself, LRC did not comply with that Judgment and did not respect the decision relating to dialogue facilitated by the African Commission, even after the expiration of the extended timeline it sought and obtained. What a reckless display of bad faith! .
In its characteristic exercise of impunity, LRC intensified its systemic and widespread violations of the protections afforded Southern Cameroons in international law. These violations have been ongoing since an unprecedented conspiracy facilitated the breach of the UN Charter and UN Resolutions paving the way to the annexation and colonisation of Southern Cameroons by the LRC. The escalation of the violations has led to genocide, also called the mother of crimes on the watch of a slow to act civilized world. This is unacceptable.
The Government of Cameroon considers these atrocity crimes as its legitimate exercise of impunity with arrogant alacrity. Its civilian and military commanders have in publicly available and well documented statements taken responsibility for these crimes. They have consistently praised the professionalism of its military for conducting a war of genocide in which more than 200 civilian settlements have been torched with shocking charred remains of vulnerable children, women, the old and the sick left in the debris. The Prime Minister Dr Dione Ngute himself on this so-called dialogue with the dead, praised the professionalism of these soldiers. 
During his visit there perpetrated egregious violations even in the neighbourhood of Bambili which he visited. There, they massacred in a cold blood, a mother and her baby. Mr Prime Minister, this is genocide and not dialogue. I did not hear you order the arrest and prosecution of the criminal soldiers who massacred that mother and her baby. The massacre of that woman and her child a few metres from where you visited indeed symbolizes the fate of hundreds of thousands of Southern Cameroonians for no reasons other than that they are Southern Cameroonians. That again sir, is genocide.
I began this piece by making a reference to the Judgment of the African Commission on Human and Peoples' Rights which LRC accepted and asked for time to comply with but reneged on. LRC in contempt instead intensified its 58 year old campaign of intimidation, humiliation, dehumanisation, indignity and death. As the representative of LRC during the entire proceedings and judgment, you were and are better placed to advise your government to the hard reality that international legality may be slow but effective. When Justice catches up with the arrogant exercise of impunity and criminality, its impact may devastate the soul of conscienceless predators of human life. Differently, stated, a time comes when the victims of atrocious crimes are given a voice from their unmarked lonely graves to seek justice on their own behalf. That time sir, will come, sooner or later, here or in the hereafter. This truth sir, is sacrosanct.
Therefore, sir, I beg to ask. How do you feel conveying the concomitant message of conditional dialogue and genocide from your President to his victims? Does the said message not greatly contradict the dialogue decided by a respectable continental justice mechanism the African Commission which was endorsed by continental leaders? Was it not obvious from the Judgment of the African Commission that an international facilitator would be required to oversee the dialogue? And was it not for this reason that it offered to play that role? In your so-called ongoing dialogue, sir, I did not hear you regret the massacres, the genocide, the crimes against humanity, the war crimes etc. 
Why? I did not hear you talk about a transitional justice mechanism to prosecute civilian and military commanders responsible for these atrocity crimes in the Southern Cameroons. I did not see you feel the pain and suffering of millions of civilian victims of the atrocity crimes. Rather, I heard the evocation and rendition of the typical and resentful CPDM sycophantic war cries and slogans praising the god-president for his promise of mercy for those who lay down arms. Laying down arms to facilitate the atrocity crimes sir? Those you alleged laid down arms, have the locations from which they allegedly defected been spared the visit of your angels of death and the mayhem they bring to the civilian population? Have they sir? I bey to ask.
There is a common and recurring position taken by the international community on this war that was declared by LRC. That position is that there should be an inclusive dialogue with no pre-conditions, to tackle to the root causes of this conflict. From where then did you come about with the exclusion of the so-called secession or separation? Is this pre-condition not a distraction and an attempt to obviate the mandatory root causes of the conflict? Are the root causes not the umbilically linked violations that eviscerated the Southern Cameroons right to external self determination under the UN Charter guaranteed by UN Resolutions which LRC opposed and opted for annexation and colonial rule?
The right to resolve this conflict through an internationally organised dialogue in which negotiations will hold sway was obtained through a legal process before a Continental legal mechanism and endorsed by African Leaders. The international community has overwhelmingly taken the same position with renewed vigour. That position is therefore, not subject to a unilateral modification by LRC. That sir, is an unacceptable diktat. This unacceptable diktat tantamount once more to a disregard for the international rule of law on the basis on which international legality, peace and security are founded.
Mr Prime Minister, sir, as you pursue this futile adventure to insult the memory of victims, permit me to remind you that the informal meeting of the UNSC on this crisis on 13 May 2019, apart, the celebration on the 23 May 2019 at the UN of the 70 th anniversary of the Geneva Conventions which LRC is a state party, should be a shock reminder to LRC that the spirit of that multilateral treaty and many others is alive. That LRC place on the radar of the Geneva Conventions will soon be guaranteed, not for the right reasons, but for its atrocity crimes in the Southern Cameroons against civilians who are protected by the convention. The anniversary ceremony of the 23 May 2019 of the Geneva Conventions 1949 and the ten anniversary of the UN Resolutions for the protection of civilians in armed conflicts should be an opportunity for LRC to seriously consider, calling off this genocidal war and withdraw its soldiers for peace to prevail. It's military misadventure and atrocity crimes have failed and will continue to fail to tame the spirit of Southern Cameroons freedom seekers who are inspired and emboldened by the justice of their cause, international legality and the pursuit of legitimate self-defence.
History sir, provides you and the government you serve another opportunity to listen to the voice of humanity and the international community and get to the negotiating table while there is time. Stop the callous slaughter and the genocide now. Your present tour is a celebration of genocide and not dialogue.
*Charles Taku is a celebrated Cameroonian Criminal Defense Counsel

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