Tag: President Paul Biya

  • President for life

    President for life

    Biya declared winner of Cameroon election for eighth term.

    In Cameroon, President Paul Biya has been declared winner of the October 12 election by the electoral authority. He is said to have received 53 per cent of the votes to the 35 per cent by the opposition leader Tchiroma Bakary. Since then, Cameroon has lost its peace, as young people, especially from the opposition’s stronghold, have cried foul and businesses paralysed in the business capital, Douala.

    The Cameroon election has once again called global attention to the integrity of the polls and democracy in Africa. For a man who has been in power since 1982, and whose health status has come to the fore of recent, the worst that many feel could have happened to the country was to be reelected. However, if he had indeed received the popular votes in a credible election, it could be said that it is the business of the people. But, both foreign and domestic observers have called attention to a lot of malfeasance at the polls, in which the man declared winner could not even stand the rigour of campaigning. For much of the campaign period, Mr. Biya was out of the country, reportedly receiving medical attention. How then is he expected to run affairs of the 20 million people in the next seven years?

    In many parts of Africa, election disputes are at the root of intractable conflicts and crises. Sit tight leaders are resented by their people, and because they have resolved to remain in office for life, they plunge their countries into very costly wars that attract foreign support for factions, thus making the issues difficult to resolve.

    West, Central and the horn of Africa have had enough of terrorist incursions that this internal dissension being caused by massive protests, arrests and killings occasioned by the election could further complicate things in the Central African country. Unfortunately, the African Union has remained a toothless bulldog, unable to meaningfully mediate conflicts or keep the peace in member countries.

    Cameroon should not be the next breeding ground for insurgents and separatists on account of this election. If AU could do nothing to call the ruling party to order, the United Nations should do so before things get out of hand. The 92-year-old President who appears to have become more of a captive of a cabal should be called to order, and if possible, carefully eased out of power as a bull would from a Chinaware shop. Where deemed necessary by experienced observers and credible statesmen, a conference of stakeholders should be convoked to ensure that everybody is carried along. In a country where the term of office is seven years, a 92-year-old should not be allowed to hold on to power while the world watches the country sink and disintegrate.

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    It is not in the interest of neighbouring countries to stand aloof while all this is going on. World powers could be made to prevail on the nonagenarian to step down if only for peace to reign. Election disputes were at the heart of the military takeover in the Sahel states and the consequent pullout from the Economic Community of West African States (ECOWAS). The sub region is yet to recover from the complications it introduced to the joint efforts to combat the war against terrorism. Cameroonians are bound to feel the effect of the ongoing conflict on the economy. Economic activities have already been paralysed in the commercial capital, and the spiral effect would be felt all through the country.

    It would appear that the country is on auto pilot at the moment, with no dominant figure with legitimacy at the helm of affairs. If the drift is not arrested on time, the opposition that went into the election with a united front behind Tchiroma Bakary could dig in, receive support externally and the country could then go up in flames. One reason some forces appear to be holding back their support for the opposition is that he is seen as one of those who solidly backed Biya for so long.

    For 16 years, he was a minister in the President’s cabinet, serving as the spokesman at some point. Even as the government became unpopular with the military called out to shoot civilians in a bid to quell riots, it was Bakary who stuck out his neck to defend the government. So, when he came out with the change slogan, many did not believe him. It took some strident campaign for some to see him as the point man of the opposition Forum for Change Coalition.

    At this point, the groups should accept to come together to hold the centre together. When things fall apart as observed by the late Professor Chinua Achebe, the centre would collapse on all. It is not in the interest of anybody if this should happen to a country as strategically important in Africa as Cameroon.

    Africa has had enough leaders who saw Louis XIV as their model. Men like Idi Amin of Uganda, Marcia Nguema of Equatorial Guinea, Jean Bedel Bokassa of Central African Republic, among others. Like Biya, Yoweri Museveni has been in power for so long, since 1986. This tendency to equate Africa with inability to hold credible polls and keep democracy afloat has to stop. The development in Cameroon is an opportunity to start the process.

  • Biya, the African parable

    Cameroonian leader, President Paul Biya, is veritably an African parable of power. He has been in office as the president of his country since the 6th of November, 1982, when Ahmadou Ahidjo gave way and handed over to him. Before then, he had been prime minister since the 30th June, 1975.

    Now at 85 years of age, and 36 years on in the presidential saddle, Biya has not had enough of political power. Two Sundays ago, the central African country, which neighbours Nigeria, held a presidential poll in which the octogenarian was widely expected to secure another seven-year term that would keep him in power until at least 92 years of age. Official results of the poll were being awaited last week because it takes the country’s electoral body, ELECAM, some fortnight to make a declaration. But there was little doubt across board about Biya’s likely return for another term.

    It wasn’t that the perpetual ruler has had no challenger for the presidential office. The 2018 poll, for instance, featured eight opposition candidates who took their chance on the ballot against Biya of the ruling Cameroon People’s Democratic Movement (CPDM). And that was nearly double a shortfall on the previous election in 2011 where 22 challengers ran against Biya. But the opposition has always been too fractured and weak to pose any real threat to the status quo; and so, the old battle horse easily won re-election in 2011 and has been projected to win the 2018 poll.

    In this latest election, there was some last minute rally by the opposition when frontline challenger and candidate of the Cameroon Renaissance Movement (CRM), Maurice Kamto, agreed to a coalition deal with another opposition contender, Akere Muna of the Popular Front for Development. Muna as a result wrote the electoral commission about 24 hours to the opening of the poll that he was stepping down for Kamto. Perhaps for the time factor, ELECAM retained Muna on the ballot, and the candidate then asked his supporters to vote Kamto. Political watchers said, however, that despite the coalition being a welcome move, it came too late. Besides, it can only be largely symbolic because it left out the Social Democratic Front (SDF) that has the second highest representation in the country’s parliament.

    Biya’s endurance in Cameroon’s presidency is amidst relative economic stability and yearly growth rate in the oil and cocoa producing central African economy that has stayed at over four percent since 2011. But many of its 24 million citizens yet live in poverty. Also, despite periodic elections, the political space is deeply fossilised and, as far as the face of power goes, a large segment of the Cameroonian citizenry has known only one president all their lives.

    Security isn’t as settled in the country, though. This year’s election held against the backdrop of two-year-long separatist agitation in the northwest and southwest regions where English-speaking citizens have alleged discrimination and oppression by the French-speaking majority and are thus pushing for autonomy. Reports accounted that the secessionist uprising has resulted in hundreds of deaths, and as well forced thousands of Cameroonians to flee either to the French-speaking regions of the country or to neighbouring Nigeria. That is not to mention the spillover of Boko Haram insurgency from Nigeria into the broader Lake Chad basin, reaching to the far north region of Cameroon.

    With those security challenges, incumbency and the consequent control of instruments of state power to a large extent advantaged Biya’s candidature in the 2018 poll. Because of separatist resistance ahead of the election, for instance, only the president’s party was able to campaign under heavy security in the two English-speaking regions. All eight opposition challengers either avoided those areas or were chased out by the residents.

    The latest poll is expected to usher Biya into his seventh seven-year term in power if you factor in his prime ministerial era. But Cameroon has not always been without term limits. After being elected president five consecutive times in what was then a one-party state, Ahidjo stepped down for Biya, who one year thereafter sidelined his former principal from the ruling party chairmanship as well. Thirteen years later (1996), the party midwifed a constitutional change that limited presidents to two seven-year terms. Biya’s second term under that legal regime was to expire in 2011.

    But before that due date, Cameroon’s parliament in 2008 adopted another constitutional bill that scrapped the term limit and paved the way for Biya to extend his rule beyond 2011. Although Biya also allowed political reforms that opened up his country’s political space to multi-party politics in the early 1990s, it has been multi-party only in name because the ruling party exerted an iron grip on power despite periodic elections.

    The example of Cameroon’s Biya is only an extreme illustration of fossilisation of power as you would find – of course, to widely varying degrees – in many African countries.

    With 93 registered political parties, Nigeria is in some practical sense a multi-party democracy. But then, the political space is largely fossilised in the hands of old order actors in the two dominant political parties. As such, following the recent national primary elections of the ruling All Progressives Congress (APC) and opposition Peoples Democratic Party (PDP), the 2019 presidential election has been widely touted as a two-way race between incumbent President Muhammadu Buhari and opposition candidate Atiku Abubakar, who is a two-time former Vice President. This is not minding that at least a dozen and half other political parties ostensibly threw up candidates – among them reputed citizens, who are of younger age but not typical politicians.

    Catholic Bishop of Sokoto Matthew Kukah, in a lecture penultimate Friday in Akure, Ondo State, argued that the problem of leadership in Nigeria is due in a large part to the fact that most actors find themselves in power without having painstakingly figured out beforehand what they would do with power if they got it. And that, he noted, is despite that “the structure of the Nigerian presidential office makes the holder of the office extremely powerful, so much that he can deploy power the way he wants.”

    I wholly agree with Bishop Kukah that the quest for power in this country should get considerably more informative, just as electoral choice by voters must become better informed. To that end, true democracy must make allowance for all options available to voters, and from which voters could make reasoned choices at the poll. That is to say, voter interest should never be restricted to consideration of incumbency or the dominance of opposition challenge, but should rather involve interrogating the nuts and bolts of action plans intended for implementation in power by all office-seekers. Put simply, we should be looking beyond only the APC and PDP for genuine promises of beneficial application of political power.

    But it is extremely important that those promises are not merely sweeping assurances or empty soapbox sloganeering. Even far less so personality attacks as presently typifies the Nigerian political space. Rather, for the 2019 poll, voters should demand issue-based campaigns that would involve office-seekers presenting detailed blueprints of their policy and action plans for their evaluation. And such blueprints ideally should be with multiple scenario casting, ranging worst-case revenue baseline expectations to the best possible projections; so it would not be a case of ‘We never knew things were this bad when we were making campaign promises’ after they get into office.

    My general point here is that one way to avoid fossilism of power in our country is to hold political actors strictly to the genuineness or otherwise of their promises and potentials.

     

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  • Our military has been following rules of engagement to the letter Govt

    • Slams US Ambassador for comments on crisis

    Condemning the carnage in its southern region by Cameroon security forces, the United States (US) Ambassador Peter Barlerin warned that America’s law prevented training or working with units against whom credible allegations of gross violations of human rights have been lodged.

    Barlerin, who was briefing the media on the outcome of his meeting with President Paul Biya, said April proved the bloodiest in the crisis in Southern Cameroon,  an indication that things were not getting better.

    A copy of his statement obtained from the Embassy’s official website, said: “On the situation in the Northwest and Southwest, the month of April has proven the bloodiest, so things are not getting better.  I discussed with the President our view that the two sides in the conflict are simply not listening to each other.

    “On the side of the government, there have been targeted killings, detentions without access to legal support, family, or the Red Cross, and burning and looting of villages.  On the side of the separatists, there have been murders of gendarmes, kidnapping of government officials, and burning of schools.  People on both sides of the conflict have engaged in speech that dehumanizes the opposite side.

    “We continue to call on both sides to stop the violence immediately.  I asked the President to use his leadership to encourage both sides to listen to each other.  One cannot have a dialogue until both sides are willing to listen to the other’s point of view.”

    On the country’s security, he said: “In the area of security cooperation, I congratulated the President on our joint efforts to fight Boko Haram and the Islamic State in the Far North.  I told him I appreciated the Minister Delegate for Defence’ assurances that U.S. equipment would only be used in the fight against Boko Haram and the Islamic State.

    “I also stressed that U.S. law prevents us from training or working with units against whom credible allegations of gross violations of human rights have been lodged.

    “In this regard, I welcomed the recent press communiqué that there would be a full investigation of alleged torture of a prisoner by Cameroonian forces and that the guilty would be punished.  A recent UNDP study found that 71 percent of those who said they had joined violent extremist organizations did so because of government action such as the murder of a close relative or friend.”

    But Barlerin’s statement was condemned by the government, which insisted its army had shown professionalism in the Anglophone crisis.

    In a communiqué summoning the Ambassador with regards to his statement, Cameroon’s External Affairs Minister, Mbella Mbella, the government accused the diplomat of a mission to destabilise the leadership in the country.

    Mbella said: “This follows a statement issued by Ambassador Barlerin on Friday, May 18, after an audience the latter was granted by the President, Republic of Cameroon. In the said statement, the Ambassador accused the Cameroonian army of targeted assassinations in the Northwest and Southwest regions, while advising the Head of State not to stand the upcoming presidential election in order to secure his legacy, following the examples of former Presidents Nelson Mandela and George Washington.

    “The Minister of External Relations expressed the Cameroonian government’s disapproval of the Ambassador’s outing, which flouts all diplomatic practices and shows disregard both in form and content for rules of civility and the law.

    “As to what concerns the form of the Ambassador’s remarks, it is important to recall that Ambassadors are envoys extraordinary of a Head of State to another Head of State. Discussions between a Head of State and an Ambassador therefore represents privileged moments in the diplomatic relations between the two countries and must be treated with utmost confidentiality.

    “Concerning the content, the Minister of External Relations refuted Ambassador Barlerin’s totally unfounded allegations concerning the actions of Cameroon’s defence and security forces, who, in spite of almost daily harassment and serious human and national losses, have constantly kept with professionalism and rigour, the rules of engagement and international humanitarian law in a bid to safeguard the lives and freedoms of citizens, as well as peace, stability and the territorial integrity of Cameroon.

    “The minister also seizes this opportunity to remind the Ambassador that the Head of State is the guarantor of the stability and constitution of Cameroon. Ambassador Barlerin was called upon to respect the Cameroonian people, notably, their sovereign right to choose their leader, first among whom is the one whose duty it is to rule the country.

    “He was reminded that President Biya is not in power by force but has always been elected in all fairness in various presidential elections against numerous and worthy candidates.”

  • Detained Cameroonian fighters: Buhari ‘s image at stake – Analyst

    Detained Cameroonian fighters: Buhari ‘s image at stake – Analyst

    A Global Affairs Analyst, Ayoola Lawal has called on President Muhammadu Buhari to order the Nigeria security services to release all the detained Cameroonian freedom fighters in their custody that were arrested in Abuja a couple of days ago.
    Lawal in a telephone conversation with our Correspondence observed that President Buhari should be very cautious of the implications on the exposed Nigerians in Bakassi region.
    His words: “On his way to Scotland, he cautions President Buhari to be very cautious of the implications on the exposed Nigerians in Bakassi region, Nigeria as a country and the self determination rights of the marginalized people of Southern Cameroon, if he is thinking of handing over the freedom fighters to President Paul Biya because so far, Nigeria has no extradition treaty with Cameroon.
    “I tend to believe that the Attorney-General of the Federation and his team are in a better position to advise Mr  President on the provisions of the United Nations Minimum Treatment Standards for Prisoners, Article 20 of the African Charter on Human and Peoples Rights ratified by both Nigeria and Cameroon, and the best diplomatic ways to handle the issue with Cameroon.
    “The Nigerian security operatives should rather concentrate and intensify efforts in fishing out the sponsors of Boko Haram and the dreaded herdsmen causing havoc across Nigeria rather than meddling in the issue of free fighters that deserve amnesty rather than unlawful detention,” he said.
  • Heightened security in Cameroon as Buhari visits

    Heightened security in Cameroon as Buhari visits

    Security in Yaounde, capital of Cameroon, has been beefed up with the expected visit of President Muhammadu Buhari to the Central African nation on Wednesday.

    President Buhari is billed to start his visit to Cameroon on Wednesday and he will hold talks with his Cameroonian counterpart, President Paul Biya, on how to tackle the Boko Haram insurgency.

    After visiting Niger and Chad after his inauguration on May 29, President Buhari had earlier shifted his visit to Cameroon due to the Muslims’ Ramadan fasting and his invitation to the G-7 meeting in Berlin, Germany.

    Security patrols in Yaounde, the country’s capital, have increased since information about the Nigerian leader’ visit was made public.

    Besides thorough checking and searching of cars and trucks with ordinary plate numbers, cars with diplomatic plate numbers are also not spared.

    Speaking to journalists on Buhari’s visit, Nigeria’s High Commissioner to Cameroon, Amb. Hadiza Mustapha said: “It is our tradition in Nigeria that when presidents come into office, his first port of call should be African countries. His visit shows the highest level of cordiality.

    “There is need to synergize between the frontline states on how to confront insurgency, in order to build on the gains so far achieved.

    “Nigeria’s relations with Cameroon have a long history of both economic and political ties anchored on affinities and shared destiny.

    “It is a very significant visit and we are looking forward to it. The President is going to spend a night which shows you how much importance he attaches to it. I’m highly honoured to be receiving the second Nigerian President as Ambassador here.”

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