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Tuesday, January 7, 2020

Prime Minister Joseph Dion Ngute: Ardent Advocate of One & Indivisible Cameroon



Prime Minister Joseph Dion Ngute campaigning for one and indivisible Cameroon in Limbe in May 2019

By Christopher Ambe

Appointed Prime Minister when the Anglophone Crisis was only escalating, Dr. Joseph Dion Ngute and his government have, since assuming office, been fire-fighting, to ensure that normalcy returns to the restive Northwest and Southwest regions, which separatists are fighting for their independence from the rest of Cameroon.

Before his appointment on January 4, 2019 as Cameroon’s Prime Minister and Head of government, Dr. Joseph Dion Ngute was not known, at least publicly, to have been nursing ambition for the post of Prime Minister.

Yet, he had in his possession the credentials and leadership skills that make for a great leader; his name was rarely cited in the media as a potential replacement of Prime Minister Philemon Yang, who served in that position for a decade.  

Having served as a member of government for many years as Minister-Delegate in the Ministry of External Relations in charge of Commonwealth, and then briefly ( from March 2018 to January 4, 2019) as Minister of Special Duties at the Presidency of the Republic), Dr. Dion Ngute ,who will turn 66 in  March this year, knew his worth as a quiet unifier and did not bother to lobby for the juicy but challenging position of premier. “Good wine”, it is said, “needs no bush”

Dr.Dion Ngute, a noted Southwest elite and traditional ruler of Bongongo in Ndian Division, probably said to himself, “God’s time is the best.”

Diplomatic language ,humility and assiduity , pundits say, were some of the weapons  he  used to accomplish  whatever  herculean task  that was  within his competence-whether in his capacity as a Member of Government, a CPDM politician or the traditional ruler that he is.

So when the Philemon Yang-led government tried in vain to resolve the escalating Anglophone Crisis, which erupted in late 2016, a seemingly shaken President Paul Biya decided to appoint a new PM in the person of Dr.Joseph Dion Ngute, who even before becoming a Member of Government, had served as the Director of ENAM Yaounde-the state-owned school that trains Cameroonian civil servants such as administrators and magistrates.

In search of a peaceful solution to the Anglophone Crisis, Prime Minister Joseph Dion Ngute, special envoy of President Biya, embarked on meet- the-people tours in   the restive Northwest and Southwest regions of Cameroon, during which he demonstrated humility, (which is a hallmark of leadership) by meeting many micro and macro groups with the Head of State’s urgent call for peace and dialogue.

During his tours, the premier pleaded with separatist fighters to drop their guns, insisting that guns don’t dialogue but people do; he collected piles of proposals on how to resolve the Anglophone crisis, which he took to the Yaounde Establishment for serious consideration.

Dr.Dion Ngute’s humble style of attempting to help resolve the biting Anglophone Crisis was generally appreciated by Anglophone communities. They  wanted him to speak truth to power about Anglophone grievances which included  a strong  feeling of marginalization for decades, in a union  of two entities( Southern Cameroons and La Republic du Cameroun),that was supposed to be based on equality of status and mutual respect.
The new PM promised to be faithful  and swift in presenting the problems and proposals to President Paul Biya, and he reportedly did.

The choice of Dr. Dion Ngute as new PM, many believe, was largely informed by the fact that, eventhough a bona fide Anglophone with sufficient knowledge about the Anglophone problem, he was (in the words of Barrister Charles Taku) “the agent representing La Republique du Cameroun 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”
According to Barrister Charles Taku,“ 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[Anglophone] crisis and offered its services.”

Barrister Taku would regret that Cameroon “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” 

As PM, Dr. Dion Ngute who hails from the oil-rich Ndian, one of the least developed divisions, critical observers argue, has been given another opportunity to “fix things” and bring happiness to Anglophones in general, who rightly or wrongly complain of being treated as second class citizens by the Yaounde Establishment.

Married to a native of the Northwest Region, Dr. Dion Ngute finds it easier interacting with the people of both Southwest and Northwest Regions.

The Paramount Chief-designate of Buea, Dr. Robert Esuka Endeley, in an interview with The Horizon in May 2019, said this of the new PM:

“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: going down and talking to the common man on the street to know their problems.” 

On his meet-the-people tours in Southwest and Northwest, the soft-spoken Premier Dion Ngute assured his varied audiences that, President Biya was now ready to dialogue- but that separation or secession would never be on the agenda.

To match words with action, and amidst clarion calls for an immediate cease fire and meaningful dialogue to resolve the crisis, President Biya on September 10, 2019 announced the coming of the much-awaited dialogue, insisting that it must take place within the Constitution of Cameroon, which country he added “remains one and indivisible” .The President appointed Prime Minster Dion Ngute as the Chairman of what would later be styled “Major National Dialogue” to resolve the Anglophone crisis. And that Major National Dialogue held in Yaounde from September 30 to October 4, 2019,with some Cameroonians in the Diaspora participating, although  separatist leaders abroad  stayed away, claiming their security was not guaranteed. 

President Biya , last  December 31,in his 2019 End of Year Message to the nation, said  “the Major National Dialogue  has paved the way for our country to resolutely embark on the path to peace, national unity and progress, which are values that have always made our country great.”

The Head of State appreciated all those who participated in the dialogue, and congratulated its organizers, in particular the Prime Minister, Head of Government Dr.Joseph  Dion Ngute.

The recommendations of the Major national Dialogue have resulted in the enactment of a law   on the promotion of bilingualism and multiculturalism, which law provides for equal use of English and French in all our public institutions, in order to strengthen Cameroon’s bilingual nature.

The Major National Dialogue has also brought about a law on “Regional and Local Authorities” which defines the status of local elected officials, the functioning of local assemblies and the allocation of additional, substantial financial resources to regions.

The much-talked about Special Status for the North-West and South-West Regions has now been provided by law taking into account the specificities of the Anglophone education sub-system, Common Law and traditional authorities.

Although Anglophone Separatists abroad have not recognized what the Dr. Dion Ngute-led government has so far done to resolve the Anglophone Crisis, there is evidence that life is gradually returning to normal especially in the urban centres in Anglophone Cameroon.
In his 2019 End-of -Year message to the nation, President Paul Biya appealed to the sense of patriotism of all Cameroonians at home and in the Diaspora.

 “Together, let us make Cameroon a land of great opportunities for economic and social development in peace and unity,” he said, concluding his speech.
One can therefore say that  during Prime minister Dion Ngute ‘s  one year in office, he has achieved much towards resolving the Anglophone Crisis, but  more still has to be done since armed separatists are still  clashing with Cameroon’s military and security forces, resulting in deaths.
 [First Published in The Horizon Newspaper,Cameroon,of January 6,2020]









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