The Former Trust Territory of the Cameroons under United Kingdom
21.5.1 The Northern Cameroons and the Southern Cameroons together comprise the
former UN Trust Territory of the Cameroons under British Administration (86,214
sq.km.) for which a Trusteeship Agreement was signed on 13/12/1946 between the
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General Assembly of the United Nations Organisation and His Majesty’s Government of
the United Kingdom of Great Britain and Northern Ireland.
Article 1 of the above-mentioned Trusteeship Agreement defines the Territory as
follows, namely:
“The Territory to which this Agreement applies comprises that part of the
Cameroons lying to the west of the boundary defined by the Franco-British
Declaration of 10 July 1919, and more exactly defined in the Declaration made
by the Governor of the Colony and Protectorate of Nigeria and the Governor of
the Cameroons under French Mandate which was confirmed by the exchange of
Notes between His Majesty’s Government in the United Kingdom and the French
Government of 9 January 1931. This line may, however, be slightly modified by
mutual agreement between His Majesty’s Government in the United Kingdom and
the Government of the French republic where an examination of the localities
shows that it is desirable in the interests of the inhabitants”.
Article 3 of the same Trusteeship Agreement defines the role of the Administering
Authority as follows, namely:
“The Administering Authority undertakes to administer the Territory in such a
Manner as to achieve the basic objectives of the international trusteeship system
Laid down in Article 76 of the United Nations Charter. The Administering
Authority further undertakes to collaborate fully with the General Assembly of
the United Nations and the Trusteeship Council in the discharge of all their
functions as defined in Article 87 of the United nations Charter, and to facilitate
any periodic visits to the Territory which they may deem necessary, at times to be
agreed upon by the Administering Authority”.
22. The Way Forward Today
22.1 The quest for Self-Determination and Independence of the Peoples and Territory of
the former British Cameroons is an incontrovertible and a burning issue. The UN should
ensure that the Self-Determination and Independence of the Peoples and Territory of the
former British Cameroons is Rectified and Regularised in accordance with Article 76,
paragraph b, of the Charter of the United Nations Organisation.
22.2 The recent Nigeria -
problems provided an opportunity for the former British Cameroons’ independence issue
to be raised and regularized. Why? Because since UN Resolution 1608 (XV), paragraph
5, of 21 April 1961 was not implemented in accordance with International Law, both
Nigeria and
Bakassi Peninsula of the UN Territory of the Cameroons formerly under United Kingdom
37
Administration. This is in accordance with Article 102 (2) of the Charter of the United
Nations which states:
…”
registered in accordance with the provisions of paragraph 1 of this Article may
invoke that treaty or agreement before any organ of the United Nations”.
22.3 La Republique du Cameroun
illegitimate administrations from the UN Territory of the Cameroons formerly under
United Kingdom administration immediately and progressively. They should also
encourage the peoples of the former British Cameroons to continue to work for their
sovereign self-determination and independence through the United Nations Organisation
to ensure international peace and security. Exiled Southern Cameroonian citizens should
be called back home. And All SCNC prisoners of conscience should be released and
damages be paid to the families of the dead.
22.4 This means that a UN Transitional Administration should takeover the Territory of
the former British Cameroons to ensure that the peoples of the Territory prepare
themselves for their Sovereign Independence and Future Government and Administration
of their Territory. The presence of the UN Administration on the Territory will not only
ensure international peace and security but will also reduce the tensions between the
peoples of the Southern Cameroons and
one hand, and the peoples of the Northern Cameroons and Nigeria on the other.
Legitimacy and legality of the former British Cameroons’ independence will be
endorsed. East Timor became independent recently. A war is not necessary.
22.5 And so the peoples of the former British Cameroons, the Northern Cameroons and
the Southern Cameroons together, have requested the Secretary-General of the United
Nations Organisation, H.E. Kofi Atah ANNAN, and his successor, H.E. Ban Ki Moon, to
make use of their good offices, drawing upon their stature and impartiality, in the
interests of preventive diplomacy, to bring to the attention of the Security Council and the
United Nations General Assembly:
.la Republique du Cameroun Mixed Commission on their borderla Republique du Cameroun had no legal right to claim Sovereignty over theNo party to any such Treaty or International Agreement which has not beenand Nigeria should withdraw their illegal and
la Republique du Cameroun in particular on the
A)
April 1961 on the Future of the Cameroons under United Kingdom
Administration.
The non-implementation of UN Resolution 1608 (XV), paragraph 5, of 21
B)
Independence of the Territory in application of the UN Resolution 1514 (XV) of
14 December 1960 Declaration on the Granting of Independence to Colonial
Countries and Peoples.
The urgent Rectification and Regularisation of the Self-Determination and
C)
under United Kingdom Administration after independence to the United Nations
Organisation as a full member in application of Article 4 of the Charter of the
United Nations.
38
22.6 Just as UNO Resolution 1349 (X111), paragraphs 1, 2, and 3 of 13 March 1959
gave independence to the state of
Assembly elections were conducted and it (Resolution) recommended that
du Cameroun
of Article 4 of the Charter of he United Nations, and just as the Federation of Nigeria
which became independent on 01/10/1960 was admitted a member of the United Nations
Organisation by UNO Resolution 1402 (XV) of 07/10/1960, so too the Peoples of the
former UN Trust Territory of the Cameroons under United Kingdom Administration
today want a United Nations resolution Granting them Independence and Admission as a
member to the United Nations Organisation in application of Article 4 of the Charter of
the United Nations.
22.7 Attached is the September 1960 United Nations map of the former Trust Territory of
the Cameroons under United Kingdom Administration (86,214 sq.km.) – United Nations
Map No. 1269 (1).
The Admission of the State of the UN Territory of the Cameroons formerlyla Republique du Cameroun on 1st January 1960 and an
la Republiquebe admitted as a member of the United Nations Organisation in application
23. CONCLUSION
23.1 There comes a time in the affairs of men when a long-suffering people must either
stand up and be counted or for ever hold their peace; a time when a people must face the
destiny which they have always known that they would face someday; a time when a man
must take a deep breath and do what he has to do; a time when the faint-hearted can
perform acts of courage beyond expectations; a time when a man must take a bold leap
into the uncertainty of the unknown in order to escape from the certainty of a past best
forgotten; a time when there is nothing to fear but fear itself; a time when a slave must
break out and take the risk of freedom or forever remain in bondage; a time when you
must reach out for that abstract goal for which you must be willing to sacrifice your life;
it is the time to live free or die. (*
23.2 That moment finally came for the people of ex-British Southern Cameroons on
December 30, 1999, when Justice Frederick ALOBWEDE EBONG, a bona fide citizen
of the Southern Cameroons and Chairman of the Strategic Committee of the Southern
Cameroons National Council (SCNC), set up by the Prince Esoka NDOKI MUKETE
leadership of the organisation, on behalf of the annexed and colonised, oppressed and
brutalised, dehumanised and exploited peoples of the Southern Cameroons, in
desperation proclaimed over Radio Buea the Restoration of the Sovereignty and
Independence of the Southern Cameroons, our chosen course for Self-determination, to
forge our destiny and build our own country in Freedom, Justice and Peace. That
proclamation too was misleading in that the Southern Cameroons is but a part of the
former UN Trust Territory of the Cameroons under United Kingdom Administration for
which the United Kingdom signed a Trusteeship Agreement with the United Nations on
13 December 1946, and undertook to lead to self-determination and independence. The
39
Southern Cameroons, therefore, can only become independent together with the Northern
Cameroons in application of the Charter of the United Nations and the Trusteeship
Agreement.
23.3 That proclamation, misleading though it was, prompted the United Nations
Secretary-General, H.E. Kofi Atah ANNAN, to visit the Cameroons on May 1-3, 2000 –
a visit that was heavily state-censured. At the end of the visit Mr. Kofi ANNAN
prescribed dialogue to defuse the potentially explosive situation prevailing in the country.
The peoples of the Southern Cameroons have been knocking on the door of
Republique du Cameroun
dictatorships have responded with all forms of violent intimidations and barefaced
state terrorism. How then do we dialogue with the deaf?
N. N. Susungi).
lafor dialogue for the past 46 years but successive francophoneled
24. The Way to Independence for the Peoples of the UN Territory of the Cameroons
formerly under United Kingdom Administration:
24.1 The way to Independence for the peoples of the former British Cameroons (Northern
Cameroons and the Southern Cameroons together) is in the hands of the UN. The UN
should follow the same path it took to grant independence to other UN territories. It must
be noted that the British Cameroons is a particular UN Territory as it had been annexed
respectively by Nigeria (in the case of the Northern Cameroons), and by
du Cameroun
independence-by-joining that the UN granted the Cameroons under United Kingdom
Administration in 1961.
24.2 The former British Cameroons today is in the same situation as the three Baltic
States (Estonia, Lestonia, Lithuania). It should be recalled that the latter three states were
granted independence by the League of Nations, and the independence was later
suppressed by the Soviet Union which then annexed them on the grounds that as small
neighbouring states, it was their weakness that allowed the German troops to crush them
very easily and then crossed their international boundary with the Soviet Union into St.
Petersburg. But with
regained their lost independence through the Unrepresented Nations and Peoples
Organisation (UNPO) and the UN.
24.3 Another way out for the Northern and Southern Cameroons is that the UN may
simply implement the UNGA Resolution 1514 (XIV) of 14 December 1960 on the
Granting of Independence to Colonial Territories and Peoples.
40
25. Finally, I should like to end this write up with these quotations from Pope John Paul
II “The Great”. During His address at Unity Palace, Yaoundé, on the occasion of His first
official visit to the Cameroons, 15 August 1985, the Holy Father said,
la Republiqueand France (in the case of the Southern Cameroons) through an unorthodoxglasnost and perestroika brought by Mikail Gorbatchov, these statesinter alia:
“Injustices committed by certain regimes concerning human rights or the
legitimate demands of a section of the population which is refused participation
or common responsibilities beget revolt of regrettable violence but which justice
could have fore-held”.
Addressing the General Assembly of the United Nations in New York on the occasion of
its 50th Anniversary of the Organisation on October 1995, the Holy Father said, inter alia:
“A pre-supposition of a nation’s rights is certainly its right to exist; therefore, no
one – neither a state nor another nation nor an international organisation – is
ever justified in asserting that an individual nation is not worthy of existence”.
It seems to me that on both occasions the Holy Father was addressing the “Anglophone
Problem” in the Cameroons.
- Finis –
Maps of the British Cameroons:
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