President Ahidjo’s lie to the Fourth Committee of the United Nationsth February, 1959:
5.3.1.1 The inhabitants of the Southern Cameroons went to the polls on February 11,
1961, on the clear understanding that the basis of the proposed UNION between their
territory and the Cameroun Republic would be a federation of equal partners, the details
of which were to be worked out at a post-plebiscite conference of delegations of equal
strength and in which the United Nations and the United Kingdom as Administering
Authority would be associated.
5.3.1.2 At the 849
Ahmadou Ahidjo, then Prime Minister of French-administered Cameroun, had this to say
in reply to a question posed by representatives of New Zealand, Liberia and Mexico as to
the form unification might take:-
th meeting of the Fourth Committee on 25th February, 1959, El Hadj
“……. I would not like the firmness and clarity of our stand to be interpreted as
a desire for integration on my part which would sound the death knell to the
hopes of our brothers under British Administration.
We do not wish to bring the weight of our population to bear on our British
brothers. We are not annexationists. In other words, if our brothers of the
11
British zone wish to unite with an independent Cameroun, we are ready to
discuss the matter with them, but we will discuss it on a footing of equality
”.
That was a mitigated lie designed to hoodwink the international community, as history
has abundantly shown.
5.3.2 on 31
(XXVI):
st May 1960, the United Nations Trusteeship Council, by Resolution 2013
“…requested the Administering Authority to take steps, in consultation with the
authorities concerned, to ensure that the people of the Territory are fully
informed, before the plebiscite, of the constitutional arrangements which would
have to be made, at the appropriate time, for the implementation of the decision
at the plebiscite”.
5.3.3 The ‘Joint Declaration’ and the ‘Joint Communiqué signed by Premier John Ngu
Foncha for the British Southern Cameroons and President Ahmadou Ahidjo for
Republique du Cameroun
unification of the British Southern Cameroons and
a Federation of equal partners. It further stated that if the plebiscite went in favour of the
option for joining the Republic of Cameroun, “
representatives from the Republic, the Southern Cameroons and the Administering
Authority, and the United Nations was to determine the period and terms of transfer of
sovereignty to a body representing the future federation”.
laon December 14, 1960, clearly stated that the basis of thela Republique du Cameroun would be
a conference would be held with
5.3.4 The secret documents also reveal that the Attorney-General of the Southern
Cameroons, Mr. B. G. Smith, on 19
John NGU FONCHA, just before the Tripartite Talks which took place in the House of
Assembly in Buea from 15-17 May 1961 (between Foncha assisted by Mr. Solomon
Tandeng Muna, Ahidjo assisted by Mr. Charles Okala, and the British Secretary State for
the Colonies, Mr. Iain Macleod), urged him not to succumb to President Ahidjo’s
shenanigans about the Transfer of Sovereignty to him (Ahidjo) because this was not in
agreement with the terms of the Joint Communiqué nor with the interpretation of the
second plebiscite question, nor with the United Nations Resolution.
5.3.5 Here is the Attorney-General’s Memo to Premier John Ngu Foncha on 19th June
1961:
th June 1961, in a Memo to the Honourable Premier,
“The choice offered to the people of the Southern Cameroons was to achieve
independence either by joining the independent Federation of Nigeria or the
independent Republic of Cameroun. The people chose the Republic of
Cameroun.
12
If at midnight the sovereignty of the Southern Cameroons is transmitted to the
Republic of Cameroun the people of the Southern Cameroons do not at that
moment achieve independence. They lose their identity and become subjects of
the Republic of Cameroun. It may well be that within a matter of minutes,
hours or days the Republic will by an act of state transform itself into a
federation of two states composed of the former Republic of Cameroun and the
former Trust Territory of the Southern Cameroons. The Southern Cameroons
will then have achieved independence not by joining the Republic of Cameroun
but after joining the Republic of Cameroun. In order that the people of the
Southern Cameroons may achieve independence by joining the Republic of
Cameroun it is necessary that the Federation should come into existence at
midnight of 1
independent State of the Southern Cameroons and the Federation of the United
Kamerun Republic. The Federation will be a free association of independent
and equal sovereign states.
In order therefore that the Southern Cameroons should exercise its sovereignty
as an independent state equal in all respects to the Republic it is necessary that
the organization representing the future Federation shall be composed of equal
elements representing the Republic of Cameroun and the State of the Southern
Cameroons. It is not compatible with the dignity of the Southern Cameroons
that that organization should be the President of the Republic acting in
association with the Head of State of the Southern Cameroons. It may be
practicable to transfer sovereignty to the President of the Republic and the
Head of State of the Southern Cameroons jointly but it is submitted that the
better course would be that proposed by the Premier and Ministers of the
Southern Cameroons, namely a body composed of equal numbers of
representatives nominated by the Government of the Republic of Cameroun
and the Government of the Southern Cameroons respectively, which body shall
appoint a temporary President of the Federation.
Sovereignty should only be transferred to an organization representing equally
the Republic of Cameroun and the State of the Southern Cameroons”.
st October. At one and the same moment there will be born the
5.3.6 Unfortunately, Foncha and Muna had already done a deal with Ahidjo by which
Foncha would become Vice-President and Muna the Minister of Defence, for which the
peoples of the former United Nations Trust Territory of the British Southern Cameroons
are today paying a heavy price in their struggle to re-write their history.
5.3.7 The Deputy Commissioner, Mr. Malcolm Milne, was so exasperated by this state of
affairs that he filed the following despatch to the Colonial office on July 1, 1961.
“…
private deal with Ahidjo, the idea being that the present Government of the
Republic will become the government of the Federation on 1
We believe, on very good information, that Foncha has already done ast October, and that
13
the sovereignty will be transferred to it and defence and national security will
become federal matters.
In return for bringing the Southern Cameroons on these terms Foncha has been
promised the Vice-Presidency of the Federal Republic and Muna has been
promised a post in the Federal Cabinet.
At one time we thought there might have been a show-down at the Bamenda All-
Party Conference with every one’s cards on the table, but all that has happened is
that Foncha has trotted out his pre-plebiscite constitutional proposals and invited
comments on them. The CPNC and OKP-and indeed the Chiefs also – have
demanded an account of what went on during the last Foncha / Ahidjo talks, but
Foncha, strongly pressed by Muna, has kept mum.
It seems that the other ministers although very unhappy are nevertheless tagging
along. Notably Foncha has told them that if the worse comes to the worst and
Ahidjo’s terms have to be accepted they can still hope to remain in office in the
Southern Cameroons.
It seems that Foncha will now trot off to Bamun armed with the views of all
parties in the Southern Cameroons (and all are unanimous in opposing any
suggestion of the transfer of sovereignty to a body other than a body representing
the future federation: they also are unanimous in demanding that defence must be
a regional responsibility). He will presumably once again test Ahidjo’s attitude. If
the latter is firm, Foncha will, I think, give into him and take refuge in the secret
deals arrangement. I am sure that the wretched little man is moved very largely
by considerations of what is best for himself; the interests of the Southern
Cameroons will come a poor second. However, he will need more than his usual
luck and agility to avoid a moment of truth should he return from Bamun having
accepted Ahidjo’s terms”.
5.3.8 And finally, on October 1, 1961, in its final act of betrayal of the innocent peoples
of the Southern Cameroons, Mr. J.O. .FIELD, the British Commissioner for the Southern
Cameroons, in the presence of a guard of honour mounted by a detachment of Grenadier
Guards and Republican Gendarmes, handed over the sovereignty of the Southern
Cameroons to President Ahmadou Ahidjo of
the bilateral agreements contained in the “TWO ALTERNATIVES”, and left the territory
on board
5.4 “
France as referring to the handover as “
Queen of England). And so ‘expendable’ Southern Cameroons was finally auctioned off
to France like a piece of merchandise nearly two centuries after the abolition of the slave
trade. That was indeed, to paraphrase Fon Gorji Dinka, “
SOPHISTICATED SLAVE TRADE DEAL UNDER UNITED NATIONS COVER
14
5.5 Right from the beginning of the federation in October 1961, President Ahidjo did
everything not only to undermine the federal structure but also the authority of the
government of the West Cameroon State (on October 1, 1961, the former British
Southern Cameroons became the Federated State of West Cameroon while
du Cameroun
of the one-party system, Mr. Ahidjo’s intention was to rely on the massive francophone
vote, estimated at about 4/5 of the electorate of the federation, to swamp any adverse vote
in the West Cameroon State. (By United Nations estimates, the population of the British
Southern Cameroons on October 1, 1961 was 800.000 while that of
Cameroun
decree; a rule characterised by intimidations, harassments and disappearances of
opponents to notorious concentration camps, and extra-judicial executions – a gruesome
catalogue of horrendous Human Rights abuses.
5.6 This measure calls into question the whole validity of the May 1972 referendum (socalled
‘Peaceful Revolution’) since the federal system of government was the basis on
which the electorate of British Southern Cameroons had voted to join
Cameroun
Government, Parliament, House of Chiefs and people of the West Cameroon Federated
State meant undermining the whole basis of the union which required the separate
consultations of the peoples of both territories in accordance with the federal constitution.
To have imposed a unitary state the way President Ahidjo did constituted a serious breach
of trust, and a fraudulent manipulation of the constitution which is unacceptable in
international Law.
5.7 President Ahmadou Ahidjo then went on to issue the notorious proclamation,
DF72-270 of 2/6/72, by which he unilaterally, unconstitutionally, illegally and
fraudulently abrogated the Union Accords, abolished the Federal Constitution and the
federation, abolished the Government, and the Houses of Assembly and of Chiefs of the
West Cameroon Federated State and imposed on the peoples of the Southern Cameroons
a unitary state which he called the
la Republique du Cameroun, in violation of‘H.M.S DIANA’ with a lot of misgivings about the future of the territory.Le Monde newspaper on 1st October 1961 quoted President Charles de Gaulle of
le petit don de la reine” (a small gift from theTHE MOST”!la Republiquebecame the Federated State of East Cameroun). Through the manipulationsla Republique duwas 3.200.000). In addition, Ahidjo assumed dictatorial powers and ruled byla Republique du. To have changed to the unitary system without the consent of theUnited Republic of Cameroon.
5.8
President Ahidjo’s hand-picked successor, by a stroke of the pen, decreed law
N°. 84-001 of 4/2/84 abolishing the United Republic of Cameroon and renaming the
country simply as
Cameroun assumed at independence on January 1, 1960, and was admitted into
membership of the United Nations Organisation, and thereby completed the
annexation of the territory and peoples of the Southern Cameroons and thereby
confiscating the enormous natural resources of the territory for the benefit of his
masters in France and his ruling junta.
15
The final blow to the entire edifice of the so-called union came when Mr. Paul Biya,
la Republique du Cameroun, the same name French-administered
5.9
Human Rights abuses on the territory and peoples of the Southern Cameroons
reminiscent of the Apartheid regime in South Africa: from the Ndu massacres in June
1991 following the massively boycotted May 1991 legislative elections; the
imposition of the state of emergency in Bamenda and the state of siege in Fru Ndi’s
compound following Ni John Fru NDi’s victory at the October 1992 Presidential
election; operations “
petroleum company, ELF-AQUITAINE, in the coastal regions of the territory to
harass, brutalise and intimidate the population to buy only made-in-France goods:
they destroyed goods legally imported from neighbouring Nigeria, and even
destroyed vehicles suspected of running on fuel imported from Nigeria. all in an
attempt to frenchify and assimilate the Anglophones, willy- nilly, into Francophonie,
and to teach Anglophones a lesson; to the aftermath of the so-called terrorist uprising
in Bamenda in 1997 with the attendant desecration of sacred shrines in Oku, Bui
division; and the recurrent massacres at the University of Buea.
He has maintained the legacy of a barbaric dictatorship and a chilling record ofDorade” and “
Delta”, masterminded and financed by the French
5.10 Destabilising Irredentist Claims by
5.10.1
Territory) claims what it calls an historic right or sovereignty over ex-British Southern
Cameroons based on the fanciful notion that it replaced the old Germany colony of
Kamerun, which, so it is claimed, had created a Kamerun Nation.
5.10.2 In any event, following the Anglo-French partition of 1916 and the renunciation
by Germany in 1919 of its right and title to that Territory, German Kamerun became
extinct. In theory of law, the British Cameroons and French Cameroun were two new
polities that came into being as from 1919. Each was the object of a separate Mandate /
Trusteeship Agreement. The International boundary between the British Cameroons and
French Cameroun is along the Simon-Milner Line traced in 1916 by Britain and France,
delimited in 1919 and confirmed in 1922. There is no treaty boundary between the
former British Northern Cameroons and the former British Southern Cameroons – only
an administrative boundary along the River Donga.
5.10.3 It follows that any claim based on German Kamerun must of necessity be
irredentist. Irredentist claims are destabilising claims and constitute a threat to regional
peace and security. They are therefore anathema in international law and relations (*Dr.
Carlson Anyangwe).
5.10.4 It is also true that parts of German Kamerun were integrated into the French
Equatorial Republics of Chad, Central African Republic, Congo and Gabon. Curiously,
la Republique du Cameroun.La Republique du Cameroun (a former French-administered United Nations Trust
la Republique du Cameroun
German Kamerun.
16
5.10.5 The people of the former UN Trust Territory of the Cameroons under United
Kingdom Administration are today asking for a return to the
total independence of their territory without resorting to violence. The people of the
former British Cameroons shall negotiate economic and political protocols in accordance
with the UN Charter and international law which will enable each country to concentrate
on the improvement of the living standards of its respective peoples so that they can live
like civilised neighbours in respect of each other’s sovereignty and dignity. Selfdetermination
for the people of the former British Cameroons will not change any
territorial boundaries that existed at independence but will have the potential to return the
territory to a state of respect for human rights and masters of their own destiny.
does not claim a similar historic right over these parts of
status quo ante and the
6. The quest for Self-Determination and Independence of the former Trust Territory
of the Cameroons under United Kingdom Administration (the Northern Cameroons
and the Southern Cameroons together – 86, 214 sq. km) is a very burning issue:
6.1 Southern Cameroons struggle for self-determination was prompted by the blatant and
arrogant breaches of trust by the Francophone partners in the United Nations-imposed
union. French Cameroun became independent on January 1, 1960 and assumed the name
of
United Nations decided that British Cameroons should achieve her own independence
‘by joining’ with either the Federation of Nigeria. These two unacceptable and ugly
alternatives pushed them into an unholy union with
6.2 The aspiration of the peoples of the Southern Cameroons was to establish a unique
Federation on the continent of Africa, and to evolve a bicultural society in which the
distinct heritage of each of the partners to the union would flourish. During the past 46
years, however, our common experience in the union leaves us in no doubt that, far from
attaining these ends, we have become a people with a problem, an annexed, oppressed,
state-terrorised, dehumanised and exploited people; and treated as a captive people by
successive Francophone-led dictatorships which trampled under foot the union accords
with callous indifference. The Federation was unilaterally, illegally, unconstitutionally,
and fraudulently abolished and French gendarmes and
the territory. And the country was renamed simply as
same name French Cameroun assumed at independence on 1 January 1960. (* The Buea
Declaration).
6.3 Since then our interests have been disregarded, and our participation in national life
has been limited to non-essential functions. Our natural resources have been ruthlessly
and wantonly exploited without any benefit accruing to our territory and its peoples. The
development of our territory has been negligible and confined to areas that directly or
indirectly benefit francophones. Through manoeuvres and manipulations, we have been
reduced from partners of equal status in the union to the status of a subjugated people.
17
And this we cannot accept. Our peoples have been subjected to all forms of horrendous
human rights abuses and state terrorism against which the United Nations Human Rights
Minorities Sub-Commission, the US Department of State, Amnesty International, the
Commonwealth, and the European Union have all at various times indicted the
dictatorship in la Republique du Cameroun for such wanton abuses.
la Republique du Cameroun. At the termination of the Trusteeship Agreements, thela Republic du Cameroun.proconsuls invaded and occupied
la Republique du Cameroun, the
7. ANGLOPHONES’ SEARCH FOR DIALOGUE AND JUSTICE
SYSTEMATICALLY FRUSTRATED, IGNORED AND DENIED WITH
CONDESCENDING IMPUNITY.
7.1 Memoranda presented to President Paul Biya on the Anglophone Problem:
7.1.1 The peoples of the Southern Cameroons have bent over backwards to make the illfated
union work but their search for dialogue and justice has been systematically
frustrated and ignored. Anglophone renaissance gathered momentum at the time of the
Cameroon National Union (CNU) New Deal Congress in Bamenda in April 1985 with a
flurry of uncoordinated activities among Anglophone groups notably in Douala,
Bamenda, Kumba and Yaoundé. The North-West and South-West Elites resident in the
Littoral province addressed the first of several memoranda to the Head of State and
Chairman of the CNU Congress in Bamenda, signed by 94 Anglophones, about “
humiliating and revolting colonial status that is gradually but systematically being
imposed on Anglophone Cameroon by the Administration
the Two-State Federation Anglophone Cameroon voted for in the United Nationsimposed
plebiscite of 11 February 1961. The memorandum concluded :
“
on mutual trust and respect for each other’s basic freedoms, justice, dignity and
peace, are to be preserved, our two cultures must be allowed to develop side by
side in a spirit of complementarities NOT of competition. Let us learn from
lessons of history
7.2 ‘The
professors, among them late Professor Bernard Nsokika Fonlon, Fon Gorji Dinka, Dr.
Carlson Anyangwe, Dr. Clement Ngwasiri, John Fru Ndi and signed by Fon Gorji Dinka
now in exile, for presentation at the CNU Congress by Professor Fonlon. The
presentation was botched. ‘
Federation with proposals for a Con-federal System of government based on four stages:
the Municipal, the Provincial, the State and the Con-federal.
7.3 On June 11, 1985, another Memorandum submitted to President Biya by the Elites of
the North-West province resident in Yaoundé and Parliamentarians attending the 1985/86
Budgetary session was signed by 30 Anglophones highlighting “the Problems of English
– speaking Cameroonians, State Security and National Unity”. They “
the” and calling for a return toWe do believe that if our aspirations for a true Cameroonian Nationalism, based”.New Social Order’ was prepared in Bamenda by Anglophone intellectuals andThe New Social Orde’r called for a return to the TWO-STATEappealed to the
18
President and his Government more than ever before to leave no stone unturned in their
quest for solutions to problems specific to Anglophone Cameroonians among which are
justice and democracy, pre-conditions for unity, peace and progress”.
7.4 On August 20, 1985, at a meeting in Kumba from 14
English – speaking Students of the North-West and South-West provinces addressed an
th to 19th August, 1985, the
“Open letter to all English-speaking Parents of Cameroon”
plans to reform the General Certificate of Education (GCE). It concluded,
concerning government’sinter alia:
“Realising that, with government indifference, the smouldering discontent in the
English- speaking region of the country can only end up in war; knowing we are
those who thus will miss the peace and security we love; conscious of the pains
and sorrows that are inseparable appendages of war; we call on our parents to
press for a peaceful and permanent solution before it is too late”.
called on their parents
view of the gravity of the country’s situation”.
They then
“to assume squarely your responsibilities before history in
7.4.1 They also called for the release of Fon Gorji Dinka and finished up by quoting His
Holiness, Pope John Paul II’s address to President Biya at State House on August 15:
… “Injustice 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
would have foreheld”.
7.5 The irony of it all is that those who were prepared to compromise the Anglo-Saxon
system of education in 1985 for purely egoistic interests are today lording it over Anglo-
Saxon institutions of higher learning in the territory which were wrenched from the
regime through our collective will and sacrifice of compatriots who defied intimidations,
blackmail and water canons..
7.6 In February 1991, a Committee of Anglophones resident in the Littoral Province,
chaired by Dr. Arnold Boh Yongbang, defied the injunctions of the Secretary of State for
Internal Security and addressed another
Chiefs, Political Party leaders, Religious Leaders and the People of the former West
Cameroon
up a united front in the event of a National Conference. The theme was:
becomes great not by the victories of its factions over each other but by its
reconciliation”.
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