Cameroun: the Battle of Languages Serves Colonial Masters by J. B. Gerald
15.6.18
There is increasing
likelihood of a civil war in Cameroun.
Captured
from German interests during WWII by the Free French the Camerouns were
divided into British Cameroun to the North and French Cameroun to the
South. At its Independence from France January 1, 1960, French Cameroun
became the Republic of Cameroun or Cameroun as we know it. To the North,
under plebiscite, the southern portion of British Cameroun voted to join
the French speaking Republic of Cameroun, while the northern (Muslim)
portion of British Cameroun voted to join English speaking
Nigeria.
Currently
the President of Cameroun, Paul Biya, has countered a rebellion by
elements of Cameroun's English speaking minority who object to
discrimination and selective denial of services and are countering the
state's security increasingly with armed force. Rebel forces are pushing
to secede, to form a country called "Ambazonia".
Rebel
strength is primarily in the north-west along the border with English
speaking Nigeria, with some strength along the coast which traditionally
draws wealthier people. There is some representation in the Capital
Yaounde to the southeast.
Taking
advantage of Cameroun's tendency toward tropical drift under Paul Biya,
Anglophone groups of the West declared independence for "Ambazonia",
October 1, 2017, as a small western region snuggled up to Nigeria and
hosting an expensive TV network and electronic startups.
One may
remember that at Cameroun's Independence in 1960, the peoples were not
chary of blood which unfortunately surprised European merchants in the
bush, while neighbouring countries met independence more gently. With
the the French and English demarcation lines decided by popular vote,
Cameroun is a poor area for English language interests to arbitrarily
assert themselves. That could only and inevitably lead to repression,
then wider conflict. So any Anglophone expansion is very likely planned
and furthered by outside interests. Cameroun's domestic Anglophone and
English militant organizations have acted unwisely.
Remember s
well that part of the package which Paul Kagame's Tutsi forces took
along from Uganda in their invasion of Rwanda, was the English language
and a most favourable exchange rate for the U.S. dollar. In choices
between colonial languages Rwanda's Hutu were basically French speaking
yet the usage of both the English and French languages are foreign
elements to African interests.
Part of the
Anglophone strategy for Cameroun seems to be calling the persecution of
English speakers 'genocidal,' as headlined by The Guardian,
quoting a lady in the bush. At this point the conflict rises from
disruption of state services, acts of violence by Anglophone militants,
and a predictable response to calls for Anglo secession. Reported
enthusiastically by U.S.A. not-exactly-pacifist sources such
as Waging Nonviolence, the English language
western media tend to place their language and funding before war or
peace. Partly as a result of our moral ignorance, and partly because
there's a reasonable suspicion of a tactical use of genocide, the
Camerounais of both European language alliances may be endangered and
share an early genocide warning.
We've
learned from Rwanda that it's necessary to establish the mutual risk of
genocide for both language groups in a civil war; in Rwanda both the
Hutu and Tutsi suffered mass slaughters although under the Tutsi victory
and rule it has became against Rwandan law to mention the genocide of
Hutu (Note the case of Rwandan political
prisoner Victoire Ingabire Umuhoza).
Partial
sources online: "'This is a genocide': villages burn as war rages in
blood-soaked Cameroon," Peter Zongo, May 30, 2018, The
Guardian; "Cameroon military and separatists fuel 'cycle of
violence', says Amnesty," June 12, 2018, BBC News; "Ambazonians
struggle for independence from Cameroon amid military takeover," Phil
Wilmot, June 12, 2018, Waging
Nonviolence.
"Cameroun: the
Battle of Languages Serves Colonial Masters"
By John Bart
Gerald
First posted: Gerald and Maas Night's
Lantern, June 14, 2018http://www.nightslantern.ca/cameroun-the-battle-of-languages.htm
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