|
Dr Christopher Fomunyoh on Cameroon Anglophone Crisis: "We
Have Increasingly Lost Our Humanity"
January, 2021
Dr Christopher Fomunyoh- the military solution cannot solve the present
Anglophone crisis
Dr Christopher Fomunyoh, Senior Associate and Regional Director for Central
Africa Programs at NDI has lamented the ongoing Anglophone crisis as says
Cameroonians in the last four years are increasingly losing their humanity and
that today killing women and children, unarmed civilians, kids just for going to
school have become the fabrics of the society.
The expert on democratization in Africa was talking to Babila Jonathan of Equinox
this Monday, January 11 as he looked at the ongoing crisis in the North West and
South West Regions, the killings, what can be done to solve the crisis and bring
normalcy to the regions.
For the past four years, separatist fighters have been battling government forces
in the North West and South West regions. The former is looking to establish an
independent state of "Ambazonia". The conflict started in 2016 with lawyers and
teachers and degenerated into a full-blown war in 2016.
Thousands of people have been killed, maimed, kidnapped and others forced to flee
their homes for shelter in neighbouring Nigeria and other parts of the country.
Both government and separatist fighters have been accused of extrajudicial
killings of civilians.
The manager of the Lobe Estate (PAMOL) plantations was recently killed as the
crisis in the North West and South West Regions continue to escalate. A
principal in Tinto, Manyu Division was assassinated and another shot in the leg.
Workers working in plantations have had their fingers chopped off and recently
the massacre in Mautu.
"The list is getting longer by the day and it is extremely painful to see the
level of violence that is now taking root amongst our people and the violence
that seem to be accompanied by impunity and a sense of indifference to human
suffering and the destruction that is in place. It is so painful and there comes
a time when we have to say enough is enough and we have to bring this violence
to an end," Dr Christopher Fomunyoh who has organized and advised international
election missions to Benin, CAR, Cameroon, Liberia, and Ghana said.
According to Dr Christopher Fomunyoh, who recently designed and helped launch the
Africa Statesmen Initiative (ASI), a military solution cannot solve the crisis
in the country's North West and South West Regions.
"In 2017 I warned that if you take a military solution to the political problem
you are not going to tackle the problem and collectively we as a society are
going to lose our humanity. It is so painful that in the last four years we have
increasingly lost that humanity and that today killing women and children,
unarmed civilians, kids just for going to school have become the fabrics of the
society," He said.
"We have to sit back and revise the approach we have taken for this crisis that
what we have tried in the past four years has not worked. We have to understand
that this issue can only be resolved through dialogue, mediation, negotiations
so we can bring the sufferings to an end. Violence only bequeaths violence and
right now I am concerned about not just this conflict but the next one. What
people have gone through, close to 70,000 refugees in Nigeria and other
countries that people are not going to forget and forgive easily the suffering
that they are going through."
Many observers, however, say the root cause of the ongoing crisis has yet to be
fully addressed and that is why the violence persists. This can only be solved
if the root cause of the crisis is addressed through a meaningful dialogue by
both parties.
"I have said so myself. Until we get down to the root causes of the conflict we
are not going to solve it. We have to have the courage and address the
grievances and until we do that the rest is just sugar-coating, speeches about a
sense of normalcy that is not there. This is unacceptable and we need to address
that," Dr Christopher Fomunyoh said.
On the issue of President Biya's End of Year address, Dr Christopher says "The
things we have seen in the last 10 days are a reminder that whatever message was
delivered on the eve of New Year is probably not resonating with the population
or the people who have control of the arms. It is about time we stop talking and
making speeches and time we sit around a table and settle our differences.
Cameroonians are tired of listening to speeches all the time."
With the call for an end to the violence coming from within and from
international bodies, the Regional Director says inviting the leaders of these
groups and sitting down in a room using a neutral platform with help from
mediators may just be the key to bringing an end to the crisis.
Dr Christopher Fomunyoh, Regional Director for Central Africa Programs at
NDI
"If the government comes on the table with representatives of these armed groups
and that both delegations come out with a joint communiqu� saying from
henceforth no gun shall be fired in the North West or South West Regions, that
kind of joint approach is likely to pay dividend than what we have seen thus
far," Dr Christopher Fomunyoh, a former adjunct professor of African politics
and government at Georgetown University said.
panafricanvisions.com
Dr. Christopher Fomunyoh
Président, The Fomunyoh Foundation
christopher.fomunyoh@tffcam.org
www.tffcam.org
|