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Ambazonia

Ambazonia, alternatively the Federal Republic of Ambazonia or State of Ambazonia,[1] is a political entity[2] proclaimed by Anglophone separatists who are seeking independence from Cameroon. The separatists claim that Ambazonia should consist of the Northwest Region and Southwest Region of Cameroon. Since 2017, Ambazonian rebels have engaged in armed conflict with the Cameroonian military, in what is known as the Anglophone Crisis, setting up a government-in-exile and capturing some territory. No country has recognized Ambazonia's existence as of 2024.

The flag of Ambazonia, used by separatists since 1999
Territory within Cameroon claimed by separatists, corresponding to the country's Northwest Region and Southwest Region

Until 1961, the territory of these regions was the southern part of a British trust territory, British Cameroon while the rest of Cameroon was a French trust territory, French Cameroon. At independence, a plebiscite was held, and voters in Southern Cameroons opted to join Cameroon as a constituent state of a federal republic.[3] Over time, the power of the central government, dominated by Francophones, expanded at the expense of the region's autonomy. Many inhabitants identify as Anglophones and resent what they perceive as discrimination and efforts to eliminate Anglophone legal, administrative, educational, and cultural institutions by the Cameroonian government.[4][5]

In 2016 and 2017, a widespread protest movement was met with a violent government crackdown, which led to rioting and violence against security forces and, in 2017, a unilateral declaration of independence by Ambazonian leaders.[6] The violence developed into a guerrilla war, and as of 2023,[7] clashes continue, with population centers and strategic locations largely controlled by the government engaged in counterinsurgency actions, with swathes of more remote, rural areas controlled by separatist militias and used to launch guerrilla attacks.[8] Ambazonian forces have struggled to form a united front, and internecine conflicts have hampered efforts to negotiate with Cameroon or establish control over the various militia groups engaged in the fighting.[9] Ongoing violence has led to widely reported human rights abuses by both sides, including indiscriminate killing of civilians, torture, rape and gender-based crimes, and unjustified detentions and kidnappings.[10]

Etymology and terminology edit

 
Colonial-era map showing Ambas Bay far left

The term "Ambazonia" is derived from the word Ambozes, the local name for the bay at the mouth of the Wouri river, known in English as Ambas Bay.[11] The name was coined by Fon Gorji Dinka in 1984 as part of a campaign for the restoration of autonomy and preservation of Anglophone institutions in the region.[12]

The term Ambazonia is more usually associated with the separatist or independence-seeking faction, while the Cameroonian government and other official sources, such as the UN, continue to refer to the "Northwest Region" and "Southwest Region" (or sometimes the "NoSo" regions), the official names of the two administrative provinces since 1972.[13][14][15] As an alternative to "Ambazonia", separatists have also used "Ambaland".[1] Other sources may also refer to "Southern Cameroons", "Anglophone Cameroon" or "Cameroon's Anglophone regions".[13]

To refer to the French-speaking parts of Cameroon, Ambazonian separatists have used the term "la République"[16] and more derogatory descriptors like "banana republic" or "colonial Cameroun". "Banana republic" is used as a criticism of the Cameroonian institutions, whereas "colonial Cameroun" is used to criticize the Francophone dominance.[1] The Ambazonian rebels call the war zone of the Anglophone Crisis "Ground Zero", a reference to the destruction caused by the civil war.[17]

Origins edit

Colonial contest in the region edit

 
Boundary changes of Cameroon, 1901–1961.

The area around the mouth of the Wouri River is where the English language was permanently established for the first time in Southern Cameroons, when missionary Alfred Saker founded a settlement of freed slaves by Ambas Bay in 1858, which was later renamed Victoria (present-day Limbe).[18] In 1884, the area became the British Ambas Bay Protectorate, with Victoria as its capital. Britain ceded the area to the German territory of Kamerun in 1887. Germany had some trouble establishing control over the hinterlands of Victoria, and fought the Bafut Wars against local fondoms until 1907.[19]

Following World War I and the Treaty of Versailles, Kamerun was divided between a French and a British League of Nations Mandate. The French mandate was known as Cameroun, and comprised most of the former German territory. The British mandate was an elongated strip of land along the border of Colonial Nigeria, consisting of Northern Cameroons and Southern Cameroons, including the historical Ambas Bay Protectorate. This territory was organized as British Cameroons.[20]

The British administered the territories through indirect rule, allowing native authorities to administer the population according to their own traditions. In 1953, the Southern Cameroons delegation at a conference in London asked for a separate region. The British agreed, and Southern Cameroons became an autonomous region with its capital still at Buea. Elections were held in 1954 and the parliament met on 1 October 1954, with E. M. L. Endeley as Premier.[21]

1961 referendum edit

The United Nations organised a plebiscite in the region on 11 February 1961 which put two alternatives to the people: union with Nigeria or union with Cameroon. The third option, independence, was opposed by the British representative to the UN Trusteeship Council, Sir Andrew Cohen, and as a result was not listed. In the plebiscite, 60% of voters in the Northern Cameroons voted for union with Nigeria, while 70% of voters in the Southern Cameroons opted for union with Cameroon.[22] The results owed partly to a fear of domination by much larger Nigeria.[23] Endeley was defeated in elections on 1 February 1959 by John Ngu Foncha.[24]

Southern Cameroons federated with Cameroon on 1 October 1961 as "West Cameroon", with its own prime minister. However, the English-speaking peoples of the Southern Cameroons did not believe that they were fairly treated by the 80% majority French-speaking government of the country. Then-president Ahmadou Ahidjo feared that Southern Cameroons would secede from the union, taking its natural resources with it. Following a French Cameroon unilateral referendum on 20 May 1972, a new constitution was adopted in Cameroon which replaced the federal state with a unitary state, and also gave more power to the president.[25] Southern Cameroons lost its autonomous status and became the Northwest Region and the Southwest Region of the Republic of Cameroon. Pro-independence groups claimed that this violated the constitution, as the majority of deputies from West Cameroon had not consented to legitimize the constitutional changes.[26] They argued that Southern Cameroons had effectively been annexed by Cameroon.[27] Shortly afterwards, French Cameroun's political leadership changed the constitution again, appointed French-speaking Paul Biya as Prime Minister and successor to Ahmadou Ahidjo.

In a memorandum dated 20 March 1985, Anglophone lawyer and President of the Cameroon Bar Association Fongum Gorji Dinka wrote that the Cameroonian government led by Paul Biya was unconstitutional and announced the former Southern Cameroons should become independent as the Republic of Ambazonia. Dinka was incarcerated the following January without trial.[28] Three years later, he escaped to Nigeria.[29]

Southern Cameroons National Council edit

In 1993, representatives of Anglophone groups convened the first All Anglophone Conference (AAC1) in Buea. The conference issued the "Buea Declaration", which called for constitutional amendments to restore the 1961 federation. This was followed by the second All Anglophone Conference (AAC2) in Bamenda in 1994. This conference issued the "Bamenda Declaration", which stated that if the federal state was not restored within a reasonable time, Southern Cameroons would declare its independence. The AAC was renamed the Southern Cameroons Peoples Conference (SCPC), and later the Southern Cameroons Peoples Organisation (SCAPO), with the Southern Cameroons National Council (SCNC) as the executive governing body. Younger activists formed the Southern Cameroons Youth League (SCYL) in Buea on 28 May 1995. The SCNC sent a delegation, led by John Foncha, to the United Nations, which was received on 1 June 1995 and presented a petition against the 'annexation' of the Southern Cameroons by French Cameroon. This was followed by a signature referendum the same year, which the organisers claim produced a 99% vote in favour of independence with 315,000 people voting.[30]

SCNC activities were routinely disrupted by police.[31] On 23 March 1997, about ten people were killed in a raid on a gendarme camp in Bamenda. The police arrested between 200 and 300 people, mostly SCNC supporters, but also members of the Social Democratic Front, an opposition party with significant support in the Anglophone regions.[32] In the subsequent trials, Amnesty International and the SCNC found substantive evidence of admissions through torture and force.[31] The raid and trial resulted in a shutdown of SCNC activities.[33] In response to this, in April 1998 a small faction elected Esoka Ndoki Mukete, a high-ranking member of the Social Democratic Front, as the new chair of the SCNC. In October 1999, when many of the accused were found guilty in the 1997 trial, the faction led by Mukete became more assertive. On 1 October 1999, militants took over Radio Buea to proclaim the independence of Southern Cameroons, but failed to do so before security forces intervened.[34] The leadership and many members of the SCNC were subsequently arrested.[33] After clashes with the police, the SCNC was officially declared illegal by the Cameroonian authorities in 2001.[35] In 2006, a faction of SCNC once again declared the independence of Ambazonia.[33]

Protests and civil war in Cameroon edit

In November 2016, a number of large protests and strikes were organized, initially by Anglophone lawyers, students, and teachers focused on the growing marginalization of English and Anglophone institutions in the law and education.[36] Several demonstrations were violently dispersed by security forces, leading to clashes between demonstrators and police in which several people were killed. Violence by both sides undermined negotiations in early 2017, which fell apart without an agreement.[37] The violence led to additional demonstrations, general strikes (called "lockdowns"), and further crackdowns by the government into early 2017, including the banning of civil society organizations, cutting off phone and internet connections from January to April,[38] and arrests of demonstrators.[39] Although the government established a Commission to focus on Anglophone grievances and took steps to address issues of language equity in courts and schools, continued distrust and harsh responses to protests prevented significant deescalation.

By late 2017, with dialogue efforts moribund and violence continuing on both sides, the leading Ambazonian nationalist movements organized the umbrella organization Southern Cameroons Ambazonia Consortium United Front (SCACUF). SCACUF unilaterally declared the region's independence as Ambazonia on October 1, the anniversary of Southern Cameroons' independence from the United Kingdom. SCACUF sought to transition itself into an interim government with its leader, Sisiku Ayuk Tabe Julius, as interim president.[40] At least 17 people were killed in protests following the declaration of independence, while fourteen Cameroonian troops were killed in attacks claimed by the Ambazonia Defence Forces.[41] The Cameroonian government stated that the declaration had no legal weight[42] and on November 30, 2017, the President of Cameroon signaled a harder line on separatist attacks on police and soldiers.[43] A massive military deployment accompanied by curfews and forced evacuations of entire villages.[44] This temporarily ended hopes for continued dialogue and kicked of full-fledged guerilla war in Southern Cameroons. Several different armed factions have emerged such as the Red Dragons, Tigers, ARA, Seven Kata, ABL, with varying levels of coordination with and loyalty to Ambazonian political leaders.[45] In practice, pro-independence militias operate largely autonomously from political leaders, who are mostly in exile.[46]

 
Destroyed vehicles after a clash in Buea, South West Cameroon

On 5 January 2018, members of the Ambazonia Interim Government in exile in Abuja, Nigeria, including President Sisiku Julius Ayuk Tabe, were arrested and deported to Cameroon into the custody of government forces to face criminal charges.[47] On 4 February 2018, it was announced that US-based preacher Dr. Samuel Ikome Sako would become the Interim President of the Federal Republic of Ambazonia, temporarily succeeding Ayuk Tabe.[48] However, despite receiving a life sentence on terrorism charges from a Cameroon court,[49] on 2 May 2019, Ayuk Tabe declared from prison the dissolution of Sako's caretaker cabinet and the restoration of his own cabinet.[50] Sako resisted, leading to the 2019 Ambazonian leadership crisis.

 
Destroyed school in Fontem, South West Cameroon

As the violence intensified, international efforts to resolve the crisis picked up. On 13 May 2019, the United Nations Security Council had an informal meeting to discuss the Anglophone Crisis.[51][52] Peace talks mediated by the Swiss government have fallen apart multiple times, primarily due to factional divisions and lack of actual control over militias by separatist leaders making even preliminary steps difficult.[53]

The war has been characterized by guerilla attacks by separatist militias against both security forces and against civilians suspected of collaboration or simply failing to abide militia's declared school and election boycotts or "lockdowns" which prevent all travel and activity. Many militias have sought to enforce a total school strike since 2017 due to concerns over the lack of Anglophone teachers and curriculum. Teachers and students have been kidnapped and killed and many schools and school materials burned while many children have had no schooling since the crisis began. Others have alleged that some militias have engaged in ransom attacks against civilians to fund their continued activities. Meanwhile, government forces have torched entire villages suspected of harboring separatists, disappeared and executed civilians without due process, and tortured detainees. Reports of indiscriminate killings, torture, rape and other gender-based violence by both sides have been widely reported.[54][39][55] The governments of the United States and Germany have expressed concern over the human rights violations and scaled back or cancelled military cooperation with Cameroon over reported abuses.[56] France, the UK as well as the European Parliament have also expressed concern and pushed for negotiations between the parties to resolve the crisis.[10]

Separatist forces edit

 
Map of military situation of the Anglophone Crisis by 2023, with Ambazonian separatist control or presence marked per rebel militia

Interim government and exile groups edit

The separatists assert that Ambazonia is legally governed by the "Interim Government of Ambazonia", as a provisional government in exile.[57] In course of the insurgency, however, this government-in-exile splintered several times, resulting in infighting and several factions claiming to be the legitimate leadership of Ambazonia.[58]

Despite the Interim Government's internal disputes, its members and other exile activists have maintained some influence over the separatist militias operating in Cameroon itself. For instance, separatist exiles have organized fundraising campaigns which included the introduction of their own cryptocurrency, the AmbaCoin; the resulting money is then used to buy weaponry for the militias on the ground.[58][59] The commanders of some militias also operate from exile.[58][60]

In order to provide the separatist movement with some cohesion and strengthen the idea of an Ambazonian nation state, exile activists have also set up a variety of other organizations to support the Interim Government. These include the "Southern Cameroons Ambazonia Consortium United Front" (SCACUF), the "Southern Cameroon Broadcasting Corporation" (SCBC) to spread propaganda, and a "Southern Cameroon Ambazonia Education Board" (SCAEB) to enforce a new curriculum in schools in the rebel areas.[61] Currently, a proposal by members of the Ambazonia Interim Government in exile states that the Federal Republic of Ambazonia would be a federation made up of three autonomous states (however, within the proposed constitution in 'Article 1, Section 1.a' this number may be subject to change).[62]

Rebel groups edit

The separatist insurgents involved in the Anglophone Crisis consider themselves loyal to Ambazonia and use the Ambazonian national symbols, but they are split into dozens of often competing militias of changing political allegiances.[58][59] The militia commanders have been described as "warlords" by researchers.[63] The armed separatists are locally called "Amba Boys".[16][59] The militias generally vary in size, ranging from small groups to alliances with hundreds of members.[58][59][64][65] The rebel militias are mainly recruited from Anglophone youths who have either lost family members to Cameroonian security forces or believe that they have no future on the labour market of a Francophone Cameroon.[16]

Many guerilla groups have joined the Ambazonia Self-Defence Council (ASC) under the Interim Government. Major non-ASC groups include the Ambazonia Defence Forces (ADF) and the Southern Cameroons Defence Forces (SOCADEF), which both cooperate with the ASC on some level.[64][16] There are also dozens of smaller militias.[16] The insurgent groups differ considerably in their aims and methods, though they generally enjoy some level of grassroots support among the rural population.[66] However, civilian support suffered over the rebellion's course, as a growing number of locals became dissatisfied with the separatists' conduct, rebel infighting, and the conflict's extended duration.[67] Most rebel groups engage to some level in criminal activities such as kidnapping for ransom[63][67] and illegally taxing the local cocoa industry to sustain themselves.[67]

Language edit

Ambazonians generally use the Cameroonian English dialect. However, separatist forces have also developed a unique slang in the context of the insurgency.[68] For instance, rebels call their camps "churches",[69] conveying deeper spiritual meaning to these important places where insurgents can organize and hide. Researcher Roderick Lando also speculated that the term "church" was connected the rebels conducting rituals invoking protective magic at their camps.[70] Similarly, some rebels refer to their guns as "bibles" and their attacks as "crusades", whereas others use the terms "sugarcane" or "stick" for weapons and "groundnuts" for cartridges.[71] Lando argued that the usage of more sacrosanct terms by only some rebel factions may had resulted from the internal disagreements within the separatist movement.[72] In contrast, the term "frying popcorn" for combat situations is very common among rebels.[17] When rebels state that they "wasted" an individual, they describe an assassination.[73] Traitors are termed "blacklegs". Those who had suffered amputations, often as a result of torture by rebel militias, are described as "short-sleeved",[74] while the act of cutting off someone's fingers is termed "garri".[75]

See also edit

References edit

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  3. ^ Nohlen, D, Krennerich, M & Thibaut, B (1999) Elections in Africa: A data handbook, p177 ISBN 978-0-19-829645-4
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  27. ^ Anyangwe, Carlson. Betrayal of Too Trusting a People. The UN, the UK and the Trust Territory of the Southern Cameroons: The UN, the UK and the Trust Territory of the Southern Cameroons, pp. 108–111. African Books Collective, 2009.
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  62. ^ Interim Government Official Site – Federal Republic of Ambazonia (17 March 2018). "PROCLAMATION OF RESTORATION OF INDEPENDENCE & INTERIM CONSTITUTION OF The FEDERAL REPUBLIC OF AMBAZONIA" (PDF). Interim Government Official Site – Federal Republic of Ambazonia. p. 24. (PDF) from the original on 7 Jan 2023. Retrieved 31 January 2023.
  63. ^ a b Pelican 2022, pp. 16–17.
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  67. ^ a b c R. Maxwell Bone (19 July 2022). "Why the spoils of war may outweigh incentives for peace in Cameroon". The New Humanitarian. Retrieved 24 June 2023.
  68. ^ Lando 2022, pp. 120–126.
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Works cited edit

  • DeLancey, Mark Dike; DeLancey, Mark W.; Mbuh, Rebecca Neh, eds. (2019). Historical Dictionary of the Republic of Cameroon (5th ed.). London: Rowman & Littlefield. ISBN 978-1-5381-1967-9.
  • Lando, Rodrick (2022). "A Survey of Some Anglophone Crisis-induced Semantic Extensions in Contemporary Cameroon English Usage". In Aloysius Ngefac (ed.). Aspects of Cameroon Englishes. Newcastle upon Tyne: Cambridge Scholars Publishing. pp. 116–129. ISBN 978-1-5275-8028-2.
  • Nkwain, Joseph (July 2022). "Current Insights into the Evolution of Cameroon English: The Contribution of the 'Anglophone Problem'" (PDF). Athens Journal of Humanities & Arts. Athens: Athens Institute for Education and Research (ATINER). 9 (3): 233–260. doi:10.30958/ajha.9-3-3. S2CID 236906769.
  • Nkwi; Nchoji, Paul (2015). The Anthropology of Africa: Challenges for the 21st Century (illustrated, reprint ed.). Langaa RPCIG. ISBN 978-9956-792-79-5.
  • Pelican, Michaela (September 2022). (PDF). Arnold-Bergstraesser-Institut Working Paper. No. 20. Archived from the original (PDF) on 16 November 2022.

Further reading edit

  • Carlson Anyangwe (August 2008). Imperialistic politics in Cameroun: resistance & the inception of the restoration of the statehood of southern Cameroons. African Books Collective. p. 60. ISBN 978-9956-558-50-6. Retrieved 9 May 2011.

External links edit

  •   Media related to Ambazonia at Wikimedia Commons
  • Official website
  • US plays unwilling host to Cameroon's rebel fundraisers, Africa Intelligence, February 22, 2023 (requires free registration)

ambazonia, confused, with, amazonia, alternatively, federal, republic, state, political, entity, proclaimed, anglophone, separatists, seeking, independence, from, cameroon, separatists, claim, that, should, consist, northwest, region, southwest, region, camero. Not to be confused with Amazonia Ambazonia alternatively the Federal Republic of Ambazonia or State of Ambazonia 1 is a political entity 2 proclaimed by Anglophone separatists who are seeking independence from Cameroon The separatists claim that Ambazonia should consist of the Northwest Region and Southwest Region of Cameroon Since 2017 Ambazonian rebels have engaged in armed conflict with the Cameroonian military in what is known as the Anglophone Crisis setting up a government in exile and capturing some territory No country has recognized Ambazonia s existence as of 2024 The flag of Ambazonia used by separatists since 1999Territory within Cameroon claimed by separatists corresponding to the country s Northwest Region and Southwest RegionUntil 1961 the territory of these regions was the southern part of a British trust territory British Cameroon while the rest of Cameroon was a French trust territory French Cameroon At independence a plebiscite was held and voters in Southern Cameroons opted to join Cameroon as a constituent state of a federal republic 3 Over time the power of the central government dominated by Francophones expanded at the expense of the region s autonomy Many inhabitants identify as Anglophones and resent what they perceive as discrimination and efforts to eliminate Anglophone legal administrative educational and cultural institutions by the Cameroonian government 4 5 In 2016 and 2017 a widespread protest movement was met with a violent government crackdown which led to rioting and violence against security forces and in 2017 a unilateral declaration of independence by Ambazonian leaders 6 The violence developed into a guerrilla war and as of 2023 update 7 clashes continue with population centers and strategic locations largely controlled by the government engaged in counterinsurgency actions with swathes of more remote rural areas controlled by separatist militias and used to launch guerrilla attacks 8 Ambazonian forces have struggled to form a united front and internecine conflicts have hampered efforts to negotiate with Cameroon or establish control over the various militia groups engaged in the fighting 9 Ongoing violence has led to widely reported human rights abuses by both sides including indiscriminate killing of civilians torture rape and gender based crimes and unjustified detentions and kidnappings 10 Contents 1 Etymology and terminology 2 Origins 2 1 Colonial contest in the region 2 2 1961 referendum 2 3 Southern Cameroons National Council 2 4 Protests and civil war in Cameroon 3 Separatist forces 3 1 Interim government and exile groups 3 2 Rebel groups 4 Language 5 See also 6 References 6 1 Works cited 7 Further reading 8 External linksEtymology and terminology edit nbsp Colonial era map showing Ambas Bay far leftThe term Ambazonia is derived from the word Ambozes the local name for the bay at the mouth of the Wouri river known in English as Ambas Bay 11 The name was coined by Fon Gorji Dinka in 1984 as part of a campaign for the restoration of autonomy and preservation of Anglophone institutions in the region 12 The term Ambazonia is more usually associated with the separatist or independence seeking faction while the Cameroonian government and other official sources such as the UN continue to refer to the Northwest Region and Southwest Region or sometimes the NoSo regions the official names of the two administrative provinces since 1972 13 14 15 As an alternative to Ambazonia separatists have also used Ambaland 1 Other sources may also refer to Southern Cameroons Anglophone Cameroon or Cameroon s Anglophone regions 13 To refer to the French speaking parts of Cameroon Ambazonian separatists have used the term la Republique 16 and more derogatory descriptors like banana republic or colonial Cameroun Banana republic is used as a criticism of the Cameroonian institutions whereas colonial Cameroun is used to criticize the Francophone dominance 1 The Ambazonian rebels call the war zone of the Anglophone Crisis Ground Zero a reference to the destruction caused by the civil war 17 Origins editMain article Origins of the Anglophone Crisis Colonial contest in the region edit nbsp Boundary changes of Cameroon 1901 1961 The area around the mouth of the Wouri River is where the English language was permanently established for the first time in Southern Cameroons when missionary Alfred Saker founded a settlement of freed slaves by Ambas Bay in 1858 which was later renamed Victoria present day Limbe 18 In 1884 the area became the British Ambas Bay Protectorate with Victoria as its capital Britain ceded the area to the German territory of Kamerun in 1887 Germany had some trouble establishing control over the hinterlands of Victoria and fought the Bafut Wars against local fondoms until 1907 19 Following World War I and the Treaty of Versailles Kamerun was divided between a French and a British League of Nations Mandate The French mandate was known as Cameroun and comprised most of the former German territory The British mandate was an elongated strip of land along the border of Colonial Nigeria consisting of Northern Cameroons and Southern Cameroons including the historical Ambas Bay Protectorate This territory was organized as British Cameroons 20 The British administered the territories through indirect rule allowing native authorities to administer the population according to their own traditions In 1953 the Southern Cameroons delegation at a conference in London asked for a separate region The British agreed and Southern Cameroons became an autonomous region with its capital still at Buea Elections were held in 1954 and the parliament met on 1 October 1954 with E M L Endeley as Premier 21 1961 referendum edit Main article 1961 British Cameroons referendum The United Nations organised a plebiscite in the region on 11 February 1961 which put two alternatives to the people union with Nigeria or union with Cameroon The third option independence was opposed by the British representative to the UN Trusteeship Council Sir Andrew Cohen and as a result was not listed In the plebiscite 60 of voters in the Northern Cameroons voted for union with Nigeria while 70 of voters in the Southern Cameroons opted for union with Cameroon 22 The results owed partly to a fear of domination by much larger Nigeria 23 Endeley was defeated in elections on 1 February 1959 by John Ngu Foncha 24 Southern Cameroons federated with Cameroon on 1 October 1961 as West Cameroon with its own prime minister However the English speaking peoples of the Southern Cameroons did not believe that they were fairly treated by the 80 majority French speaking government of the country Then president Ahmadou Ahidjo feared that Southern Cameroons would secede from the union taking its natural resources with it Following a French Cameroon unilateral referendum on 20 May 1972 a new constitution was adopted in Cameroon which replaced the federal state with a unitary state and also gave more power to the president 25 Southern Cameroons lost its autonomous status and became the Northwest Region and the Southwest Region of the Republic of Cameroon Pro independence groups claimed that this violated the constitution as the majority of deputies from West Cameroon had not consented to legitimize the constitutional changes 26 They argued that Southern Cameroons had effectively been annexed by Cameroon 27 Shortly afterwards French Cameroun s political leadership changed the constitution again appointed French speaking Paul Biya as Prime Minister and successor to Ahmadou Ahidjo In a memorandum dated 20 March 1985 Anglophone lawyer and President of the Cameroon Bar Association Fongum Gorji Dinka wrote that the Cameroonian government led by Paul Biya was unconstitutional and announced the former Southern Cameroons should become independent as the Republic of Ambazonia Dinka was incarcerated the following January without trial 28 Three years later he escaped to Nigeria 29 Southern Cameroons National Council edit Main article Southern Cameroons National Council In 1993 representatives of Anglophone groups convened the first All Anglophone Conference AAC1 in Buea The conference issued the Buea Declaration which called for constitutional amendments to restore the 1961 federation This was followed by the second All Anglophone Conference AAC2 in Bamenda in 1994 This conference issued the Bamenda Declaration which stated that if the federal state was not restored within a reasonable time Southern Cameroons would declare its independence The AAC was renamed the Southern Cameroons Peoples Conference SCPC and later the Southern Cameroons Peoples Organisation SCAPO with the Southern Cameroons National Council SCNC as the executive governing body Younger activists formed the Southern Cameroons Youth League SCYL in Buea on 28 May 1995 The SCNC sent a delegation led by John Foncha to the United Nations which was received on 1 June 1995 and presented a petition against the annexation of the Southern Cameroons by French Cameroon This was followed by a signature referendum the same year which the organisers claim produced a 99 vote in favour of independence with 315 000 people voting 30 SCNC activities were routinely disrupted by police 31 On 23 March 1997 about ten people were killed in a raid on a gendarme camp in Bamenda The police arrested between 200 and 300 people mostly SCNC supporters but also members of the Social Democratic Front an opposition party with significant support in the Anglophone regions 32 In the subsequent trials Amnesty International and the SCNC found substantive evidence of admissions through torture and force 31 The raid and trial resulted in a shutdown of SCNC activities 33 In response to this in April 1998 a small faction elected Esoka Ndoki Mukete a high ranking member of the Social Democratic Front as the new chair of the SCNC In October 1999 when many of the accused were found guilty in the 1997 trial the faction led by Mukete became more assertive On 1 October 1999 militants took over Radio Buea to proclaim the independence of Southern Cameroons but failed to do so before security forces intervened 34 The leadership and many members of the SCNC were subsequently arrested 33 After clashes with the police the SCNC was officially declared illegal by the Cameroonian authorities in 2001 35 In 2006 a faction of SCNC once again declared the independence of Ambazonia 33 Protests and civil war in Cameroon edit Main articles 2016 2017 Cameroonian protests and Anglophone Crisis In November 2016 a number of large protests and strikes were organized initially by Anglophone lawyers students and teachers focused on the growing marginalization of English and Anglophone institutions in the law and education 36 Several demonstrations were violently dispersed by security forces leading to clashes between demonstrators and police in which several people were killed Violence by both sides undermined negotiations in early 2017 which fell apart without an agreement 37 The violence led to additional demonstrations general strikes called lockdowns and further crackdowns by the government into early 2017 including the banning of civil society organizations cutting off phone and internet connections from January to April 38 and arrests of demonstrators 39 Although the government established a Commission to focus on Anglophone grievances and took steps to address issues of language equity in courts and schools continued distrust and harsh responses to protests prevented significant deescalation By late 2017 with dialogue efforts moribund and violence continuing on both sides the leading Ambazonian nationalist movements organized the umbrella organization Southern Cameroons Ambazonia Consortium United Front SCACUF SCACUF unilaterally declared the region s independence as Ambazonia on October 1 the anniversary of Southern Cameroons independence from the United Kingdom SCACUF sought to transition itself into an interim government with its leader Sisiku Ayuk Tabe Julius as interim president 40 At least 17 people were killed in protests following the declaration of independence while fourteen Cameroonian troops were killed in attacks claimed by the Ambazonia Defence Forces 41 The Cameroonian government stated that the declaration had no legal weight 42 and on November 30 2017 the President of Cameroon signaled a harder line on separatist attacks on police and soldiers 43 A massive military deployment accompanied by curfews and forced evacuations of entire villages 44 This temporarily ended hopes for continued dialogue and kicked of full fledged guerilla war in Southern Cameroons Several different armed factions have emerged such as the Red Dragons Tigers ARA Seven Kata ABL with varying levels of coordination with and loyalty to Ambazonian political leaders 45 In practice pro independence militias operate largely autonomously from political leaders who are mostly in exile 46 nbsp Destroyed vehicles after a clash in Buea South West CameroonOn 5 January 2018 members of the Ambazonia Interim Government in exile in Abuja Nigeria including President Sisiku Julius Ayuk Tabe were arrested and deported to Cameroon into the custody of government forces to face criminal charges 47 On 4 February 2018 it was announced that US based preacher Dr Samuel Ikome Sako would become the Interim President of the Federal Republic of Ambazonia temporarily succeeding Ayuk Tabe 48 However despite receiving a life sentence on terrorism charges from a Cameroon court 49 on 2 May 2019 Ayuk Tabe declared from prison the dissolution of Sako s caretaker cabinet and the restoration of his own cabinet 50 Sako resisted leading to the 2019 Ambazonian leadership crisis nbsp Destroyed school in Fontem South West CameroonAs the violence intensified international efforts to resolve the crisis picked up On 13 May 2019 the United Nations Security Council had an informal meeting to discuss the Anglophone Crisis 51 52 Peace talks mediated by the Swiss government have fallen apart multiple times primarily due to factional divisions and lack of actual control over militias by separatist leaders making even preliminary steps difficult 53 The war has been characterized by guerilla attacks by separatist militias against both security forces and against civilians suspected of collaboration or simply failing to abide militia s declared school and election boycotts or lockdowns which prevent all travel and activity Many militias have sought to enforce a total school strike since 2017 due to concerns over the lack of Anglophone teachers and curriculum Teachers and students have been kidnapped and killed and many schools and school materials burned while many children have had no schooling since the crisis began Others have alleged that some militias have engaged in ransom attacks against civilians to fund their continued activities Meanwhile government forces have torched entire villages suspected of harboring separatists disappeared and executed civilians without due process and tortured detainees Reports of indiscriminate killings torture rape and other gender based violence by both sides have been widely reported 54 39 55 The governments of the United States and Germany have expressed concern over the human rights violations and scaled back or cancelled military cooperation with Cameroon over reported abuses 56 France the UK as well as the European Parliament have also expressed concern and pushed for negotiations between the parties to resolve the crisis 10 Separatist forces edit nbsp Map of military situation of the Anglophone Crisis by 2023 with Ambazonian separatist control or presence marked per rebel militiaInterim government and exile groups edit Main article Interim Government of Ambazonia The separatists assert that Ambazonia is legally governed by the Interim Government of Ambazonia as a provisional government in exile 57 In course of the insurgency however this government in exile splintered several times resulting in infighting and several factions claiming to be the legitimate leadership of Ambazonia 58 Despite the Interim Government s internal disputes its members and other exile activists have maintained some influence over the separatist militias operating in Cameroon itself For instance separatist exiles have organized fundraising campaigns which included the introduction of their own cryptocurrency the AmbaCoin the resulting money is then used to buy weaponry for the militias on the ground 58 59 The commanders of some militias also operate from exile 58 60 In order to provide the separatist movement with some cohesion and strengthen the idea of an Ambazonian nation state exile activists have also set up a variety of other organizations to support the Interim Government These include the Southern Cameroons Ambazonia Consortium United Front SCACUF the Southern Cameroon Broadcasting Corporation SCBC to spread propaganda and a Southern Cameroon Ambazonia Education Board SCAEB to enforce a new curriculum in schools in the rebel areas 61 Currently a proposal by members of the Ambazonia Interim Government in exile states that the Federal Republic of Ambazonia would be a federation made up of three autonomous states however within the proposed constitution in Article 1 Section 1 a this number may be subject to change 62 Rebel groups edit Main article List of Ambazonian militant groups See also List of Ambazonian commanders in the Anglophone Crisis The separatist insurgents involved in the Anglophone Crisis consider themselves loyal to Ambazonia and use the Ambazonian national symbols but they are split into dozens of often competing militias of changing political allegiances 58 59 The militia commanders have been described as warlords by researchers 63 The armed separatists are locally called Amba Boys 16 59 The militias generally vary in size ranging from small groups to alliances with hundreds of members 58 59 64 65 The rebel militias are mainly recruited from Anglophone youths who have either lost family members to Cameroonian security forces or believe that they have no future on the labour market of a Francophone Cameroon 16 Many guerilla groups have joined the Ambazonia Self Defence Council ASC under the Interim Government Major non ASC groups include the Ambazonia Defence Forces ADF and the Southern Cameroons Defence Forces SOCADEF which both cooperate with the ASC on some level 64 16 There are also dozens of smaller militias 16 The insurgent groups differ considerably in their aims and methods though they generally enjoy some level of grassroots support among the rural population 66 However civilian support suffered over the rebellion s course as a growing number of locals became dissatisfied with the separatists conduct rebel infighting and the conflict s extended duration 67 Most rebel groups engage to some level in criminal activities such as kidnapping for ransom 63 67 and illegally taxing the local cocoa industry to sustain themselves 67 Language editAmbazonians generally use the Cameroonian English dialect However separatist forces have also developed a unique slang in the context of the insurgency 68 For instance rebels call their camps churches 69 conveying deeper spiritual meaning to these important places where insurgents can organize and hide Researcher Roderick Lando also speculated that the term church was connected the rebels conducting rituals invoking protective magic at their camps 70 Similarly some rebels refer to their guns as bibles and their attacks as crusades whereas others use the terms sugarcane or stick for weapons and groundnuts for cartridges 71 Lando argued that the usage of more sacrosanct terms by only some rebel factions may had resulted from the internal disagreements within the separatist movement 72 In contrast the term frying popcorn for combat situations is very common among rebels 17 When rebels state that they wasted an individual they describe an assassination 73 Traitors are termed blacklegs Those who had suffered amputations often as a result of torture by rebel militias are described as short sleeved 74 while the act of cutting off someone s fingers is termed garri 75 See also editAmbaCoin Biafra Southern Cameroons Timeline of the Anglophone CrisisReferences edit a b c Nkwain 2022 p 245 Cameroon Military Executing Abusing HRW Voice of America Agence France Presse 11 August 2022 Retrieved 22 March 2023 In 2017 resentment at perceived discrimination snowballed into the declaration of an independent state the Federal Republic of Ambazonia an entity that is not recognised internationally Nohlen D Krennerich M amp Thibaut B 1999 Elections in Africa A data handbook p177 ISBN 978 0 19 829645 4 Rogers Orock 11 August 2022 Cameroon how language plunged a country into deadly conflict with no end in sight The Conversation Retrieved 22 March 2023 Nancy Wangue Moussissa 2 August 2022 Cameroon Crisis grinds on due to anglophone divisions Yaounde s unwillingness to negotiate The Africa Report Retrieved 22 March 2023 Who are Cameroon s self named Ambazonia secessionists DW 30 September 2019 Retrieved 2020 01 07 Kindzeka Moki 2 January 2023 Cameroon Separatists Enforce Curfew After President Says Troops Crushing Rebellion Voice of America VOA Retrieved 3 February 2023 Cameroon s Anglophone Crisis How to Get to Talks Crisis Group 2 May 2019 Accessed 2 May 2019 Briefing Cameroon s intensifying conflict and what it means for civilians The New Humanitarian 6 February 2020 Accessed 18 August 2021 a b Cameroon Events of 2019 HRW World Report 2020 Rights Trends in Cameroon Human Rights Watch 10 December 2019 Retrieved August 18 2021 a href Template Cite book html title Template Cite book cite book a website ignored help Victor T Le Vine 2004 Politics in Francophone Africa Lynne Rienner Publishers pp 6 ISBN 978 1 58826 249 3 Retrieved 9 May 2011 Gorji Dinka Releases Ambazonia Message CameroonPostline cameroonpostline com Retrieved 2020 01 08 a b DeLancey DeLancey amp Mbuh 2019 p 43 Biya Paul Cameroon Head of State s Message to the Nation 2019 Republic of Cameroon Presidency of the Republic Retrieved 18 August 2021 Cameroon Humanitarian Response Plan March 2021 PDF UN org United Nations Retrieved 18 August 2021 a b c d e Pelican 2022 p 16 a b Lando 2022 p 124 The Early Times in Victoria Limbe Archived from the original on 7 March 2016 Retrieved 26 October 2016 The Cameroon Tribune No 600 p 2 26 December 1996 Lee Alexander and Kenneth A Schultz Comparing British and French colonial legacies A discontinuity analysis of Cameroon p 10 APSA 2011 Annual Meeting Paper 2011 DeLancey Mark W and Mark Dike DeLancey 2000 Historical Dictionary of the Republic of Cameroon 3rd ed Lanham Maryland The Scarecrow Press Nohlen D Krennerich M amp Thibaut B 1999 Elections in Africa A data handbook p177 ISBN 0 19 829645 2 Amaazee Victor Bong The Igbo scare in the British Cameroons c 1945 61 The Journal of African History 31 2 1990 281 293 Ndi Anthony 16 March 2014 Southern West Cameroon Revisited 1950 1972 Volume One Unveiling Inescapable Traps Langaa RPCIG pp 217 ISBN 978 9956 791 44 6 Elections in Cameroon Archived 3 September 2011 at the Wayback Machine African Elections Database Roger Jules and Sombaye Eyango Inside the Virtual Ambazonia Separatism Hate Speech Disinformation and Diaspora in the Cameroonian Anglophone Crisis p 28 2018 Anyangwe Carlson Betrayal of Too Trusting a People The UN the UK and the Trust Territory of the Southern Cameroons The UN the UK and the Trust Territory of the Southern Cameroons pp 108 111 African Books Collective 2009 Nkwi Nchoji Paul 2015 The Anthropology of Africa Challenges for the 21st Century illustrated reprint ed p 478 Langaa RPCIG ISBN 978 9956 792 79 5 Cameroon s anglophone war Part 1 A rifle as the only way out Archived 9 July 2018 at the Wayback Machine IPP Media 9 July 2018 Accessed 9 July 2018 Southern Cameroons Peoples Organisation website Archived 27 September 2007 at the Wayback Machine a b Katharine Murison ed 2003 Africa South of the Sahara 2004 Europa Publications pp 163 164 ISBN 978 1 85743 183 4 March 1997 incidents in the north west province CMR36066 E Immigration and Refugee Board of Canada 31 January 2001 Accessed 10 May 2019 a b c Tom Lansdorf ed 2017 Cameroon Political Handbook of the World 2016 2017 CQ Press pp 236 246 ISBN 978 1 5063 2715 0 Elong Eric Ebolo Sovereignty in the Making The Case of Anglophone Cameroon 2 p 24 Secessionist minority Anglophone group silenced The New Humanitarian 19 February 2007 Accessed 27 October 2019 Cameroon teachers lawyers strike in battle for English www aljazeera com Retrieved 2020 01 08 Cameroon s Anglophone Crisis at the Crossroads International Crisis Group 2 August 2017 Retrieved 24 August 2021 Caldwell Mark 21 April 2017 Cameroon restores internet to English speaking region Deutsche Welle Retrieved 24 August 2021 a b A Turn for the Worse Violence and Human Rights Violations in Anglophone Cameroon amnesty org Amnesty International 11 June 2018 Retrieved 24 August 2021 Southern Cameroons gets new government with Sessekou Ayuk Tabe as Interim President Cameroon Concord Archived from the original on July 25 2020 Retrieved 3 August 2018 Cameroon government declares war on secessionist rebels 4 December 2017 Cameroon s English speakers call for independence Al Jazeera Biya declares war on Anglophone separatists The SUN Newspaper Cameroon The SUN Newspaper Cameroon 2017 12 05 Archived from the original on 2018 07 31 Retrieved 2018 07 31 Cameroon escalates military crackdown on Anglophone separatists Reuters 6 December 2017 Cameroon s Anglophone crisis Red Dragons and Tigers the rebels fighting for independence BBC Oct 4 2018 Accessed Oct 4 2018 Frohlich Silja Kopp Dirke 2019 09 30 Who are Cameroon s self named Ambazonia secessionists Deutsche Welle Retrieved August 20 2021 Just In Dr Samuel Ikome Sako Is New Acting Interim President of The Federal Republic of Ambazonia Cameroon News Agency Feb 4 2018 Accessed Apr 19 2018 Just In Dr Samuel Ikome Sako Is New Acting Interim President of The Federal Republic of Ambazonia Cameroon News Agency 4 February 2018 Cameroon Separatist leader and followers handed life sentences DW 20 08 2019 DW COM Retrieved 2020 01 08 admins Ambazonia Leader Sisiku Ayuktabe Dissolves Sako Caretaker Government Re installs Own Cabinet Cameroon News Agency Retrieved 2020 01 07 UN Security Council to Discuss Cameroon s Escalating Crisis Voice of America Retrieved 2020 01 07 Cameroon UN Security Council to discuss Anglophone crisis Journal du Cameroun in French 2019 05 05 Retrieved 2020 01 07 Craig Jess 1 June 2021 Caught in the middle Peace activists in Cameroon try to end a brutal war The New Humanitarian Retrieved 24 August 2021 Cameroon Events of 2019 HRW World Report 2020 Rights Trends in Cameroon Human Rights Watch 10 December 2019 Retrieved 18 August 2021 Cameroon New Abuses by Both Sides hrw org Human Rights Watch 2 August 2021 Retrieved 24 August 2021 Searcey Dionne Eric Schmitt Thomas Gibbons Neff Feb 7 2019 U S Reduces Military Aid to Cameroon Over Human Rights Abuses New York Times Retrieved August 18 2021 Several killed in Cameroon as anglophones declare independent Ambazonia Euractiv 2 October 2017 Retrieved 10 May 2018 a b c d e Cameroon s Separatist Movement Is Going International Foreign Policy 13 May 2019 Accessed 14 May 2019 a b c d DeLancey DeLancey amp Mbuh 2019 p 48 English speaking villages are burning in Cameroon A report from a forgotten conflict The Economist No 7 November 2019 9 November 2019 pp 41 42 Retrieved 11 December 2019 Nkwain 2022 p 235 Interim Government Official Site Federal Republic of Ambazonia 17 March 2018 PROCLAMATION OF RESTORATION OF INDEPENDENCE amp INTERIM CONSTITUTION OF The FEDERAL REPUBLIC OF AMBAZONIA PDF Interim Government Official Site Federal Republic of Ambazonia p 24 Archived PDF from the original on 7 Jan 2023 Retrieved 31 January 2023 a b Pelican 2022 pp 16 17 a b Cameroon I spent a week embedded with Anglophone armed separatists RFI Jun 14 2018 Accessed Jun 14 2018 Cameroon s Anglophone Crisis How to Get to Talks Crisis Group May 2 2019 Accessed May 2 2019 Pelican 2022 p 17 a b c R Maxwell Bone 19 July 2022 Why the spoils of war may outweigh incentives for peace in Cameroon The New Humanitarian Retrieved 24 June 2023 Lando 2022 pp 120 126 Lando 2022 p 120 Lando 2022 p 121 Lando 2022 pp 121 123 Lando 2022 p 122 Lando 2022 pp 125 126 Lando 2022 p 125 Lando 2022 p 126 Works cited edit DeLancey Mark Dike DeLancey Mark W Mbuh Rebecca Neh eds 2019 Historical Dictionary of the Republic of Cameroon 5th ed London Rowman amp Littlefield ISBN 978 1 5381 1967 9 Lando Rodrick 2022 A Survey of Some Anglophone Crisis induced Semantic Extensions in Contemporary Cameroon English Usage In Aloysius Ngefac ed Aspects of Cameroon Englishes Newcastle upon Tyne Cambridge Scholars Publishing pp 116 129 ISBN 978 1 5275 8028 2 Nkwain Joseph July 2022 Current Insights into the Evolution of Cameroon English The Contribution of the Anglophone Problem PDF Athens Journal of Humanities amp Arts Athens Athens Institute for Education and Research ATINER 9 3 233 260 doi 10 30958 ajha 9 3 3 S2CID 236906769 Nkwi Nchoji Paul 2015 The Anthropology of Africa Challenges for the 21st Century illustrated reprint ed Langaa RPCIG ISBN 978 9956 792 79 5 Pelican Michaela September 2022 The Anglophone conflict in Cameroon historical and political background PDF Arnold Bergstraesser Institut Working Paper No 20 Archived from the original PDF on 16 November 2022 Further reading editCarlson Anyangwe August 2008 Imperialistic politics in Cameroun resistance amp the inception of the restoration of the statehood of southern Cameroons African Books Collective p 60 ISBN 978 9956 558 50 6 Retrieved 9 May 2011 External links edit nbsp Media related to Ambazonia at Wikimedia Commons Official website US plays unwilling host to Cameroon s rebel fundraisers Africa Intelligence February 22 2023 requires free registration Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Ambazonia amp oldid 1202765439, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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