fbpx
Wikipedia

Osendé Afana

Castor Osendé Afana (1930 – 15 March 1966) was a Marxist economist and militant nationalist who died in 1966 while fighting as a guerrilla against the government of Cameroon.

Castor Osendé Afana
Born1930
Died15 March 1966(1966-03-15) (aged 35–36)
Ndélélé, Cameroon
NationalityCameroonian
OccupationEconomist

Early years Edit

Castor Osendé Afana was born in 1930 in Ngoksa near Sa'a, in the Centre Region of Cameroon. In 1948 he was admitted to the seminary at Mvolyé, where he became a strong friend of Albert Ndongmo, the future Bishop of Nkongsamba. He left the seminary in 1950 and became a militant nationalist.[1] At that time Eastern Cameroon was under French colonial rule, and would not gain independence until 1960. Afana joined the Union of the Peoples of Cameroon (UPC), a left-wing movement agitating for independence and led by Ruben Um Nyobé.

Osendé Afana went to Toulouse, France to study Economic Science, and by 1956 was a vice-president of the Black African Students Federation in France (Fédération des étudiants d'Afrique noire en France – FEANF), and was managing director of the FEANF organ L'Etudiant d'Afrique noire.[2] As a UPC militant he ensured that the issues of Cameroon were well-covered.[3] While he was managing director, the moderate viewpoint of the magazine shifted to a harder and more incisive tone.[4] In 1958 Osendé Afana was General Treasurer of FEANF, as well as being responsible for the UPC in France.[5]

In 1958, after Ruben Um Nyobé died, Osendé Afana decided to abandon his thesis and rejoin the leadership of the UPC, proposing himself as a candidate for the new Secretary General. Nyobé's successor, Félix-Roland Moumié, told him "There is no longer a Secretary General. There was one, he is dead, that is it." However, Osendé Afana was designated UPC representative at the Afro-Asian People's Solidarity Conference in Cairo in December 1957 – January 1958. The conference was dominated by supporters of the Chinese version of communism, and later Osendé's Maoism was to arouse suspicions with the UPC leadership in Accra.[6] Osendé Afana completed his studies in Paris in September 1962 and travelled to Accra.[7]

UPC leadership in exile Edit

In April and May 1955 the UPC held a series of angry meetings, circulated pamphlets and organised strikes. On 13 July 1955 the French government dissolved the UPC by decree. Most of the UPC leaders moved to Kumba in the British-administered Southern Cameroons to avoid being jailed by the colonial power.[8] In July 1957, under pressure from the French, the British authorities in western Cameroon deported the leaders of the UPC to Khartoum, Sudan. They moved in turn to Cairo, Egypt, to Conakry, Guinea and finally to Accra, Ghana.[9] After Cameroon gained independence in 1960, UPC rebels who had been fighting the French colonial government continued to fight the government of President Ahmadou Ahidjo, whom they considered to be a puppet of the French.[10]

On 6 September 1962 the UPC leadership in exile met in Accra at Ndeh Ntumazah's house, and decided to exclude the "criminal clique of Woungly" from the administrative secretariat.[11] At ten that evening, when the attendees were about to leave, a bomb exploded without causing any injury. The Ghana authorities were not amused and threw the entire UPC leadership in jail. In October they freed Massaga, Tchaptchet and Ntumazah, but kept Abel Kingué in prison.[7] On 13 September 1962 the UPC organised its first Assemblée populaire sous maquis in Mungo, where the Revolutionary Committee was named. The committee was presided over by Ernest Ouandié. Other members were Abel Kingué, Michel Ndoh, Ndongo Diyé, Osendé Afana, Nicanor Njiawe and Woungly-Massaga.[12] A two-headed leadership was theoretically in place, with Abel Kingué leading the exiles from Ghana and Ernest Ouandié in the maquis. The organisation functioned poorly due to communication problems and also to the Sino-Soviet split. The next year it split, with Abel Kingué and Osendé Afana allied with Ntumazah and opposed to the other leaders.[13]

Guerilla Edit

 
Baka people of Eastern Cameroon

In 1963 Osendé Afana left Cairo, Egypt, where he had taken refuge. He travelled to Conakry, Guinea, and then to Accra, Ghana, where he met the core of the leadership in exile. He spent the following months in Brazzaville before secretly entering Cameroon with the intent of establishing a new maquis, a second front in the Moloundou region, a corner of Cameroon that borders the Republic of the Congo. In August 1963 there had been a popular revolution in Congo Brazzaville in which the neo-colonial regime of Fulbert Youlou was replaced by a government led by Alphonse Massemba-Débat. This government was relatively friendly to the UPC rebels, opening the possibility of supply from the Congo.[14]

Details of his activity in the period that followed are sketchy, but Osendé Afana seems to have made several visits to the extremely poor Moloundou region, where he made contact with the local people, mostly Bakas.[15] On 1 September 1965 a small party led by Asana entered Moloundou, mainly aiming to educate the people rather than start an uprising, but was forced to leave quickly.[16] He intended to establish a politico-administrative organisation on Maoist lines, but the population of this very backward part of Cameroon was not receptive to these ideas.[17]

A few months later Osendé Afana's small group returned to Moloundou. By 5 March 1966 they had been detected and encircled by troops that were far more at home in the forest than they were. Osendé, a myopic intellectual, lost his spectacles and his sandals.[17] On 15 March 1966 his party was ambushed by a Cameroon army unit.[16] He did not take flight, as did most of his companions. Taken prisoner, he was killed and decapitated, and his head was flown by helicopter to Yaoundé so that President Ahmadou Ahidjo could look into the eyes of the dead man.[15]

Publications and views Edit

Osendé Afana's article Justice pour le Cameroun (Justice for Cameroon) appeared in the first issue of L'Etudiant d'Afrique noire (The Black African Student) in 1956. It included a short but complete overview of the French and British colonial rule in Cameroon, including the annexation of various parts of the territory to Nigeria.[18] In issue 8, January 1857, he published an important article Pour ou contre L'Etudian d'Afrique Noire?[19] In February 1957 Afana gave his study Le Kamerun en lutte to the fourth United Nations commission, and in July 1957 published L'Etat sous tutelle de Cameroun (The Trust State of Cameroon).[3] Osendé Afana was the author of a thesis on economics that was published in the year of his death.[15]

In the 1950s and 1960s there was rivalry between the Chinese and Soviet communist parties. Osendé Afana aligned himself with the Chinese, who seemed more revolutionary in their views than the Soviets.[6] He theorised on the existence of a "primitive communism" in the pre-colonial era, but noted the existence of contradictions in the social and inter-tribal structures, and the relations between the sexes and the generations.[20] In a brochure published after his death, Osendé Afana gave the standard Marxist viewpoint: "The proletariat is the most revolutionary class... Some say that in Africa it is the peasantry that is the most exploited... but anyway, it is the proletariat that is most conscious of their exploitation."[21]

References Edit

Citations

  1. ^ Messina & Slageren 2005, p. 375.
  2. ^ Sadji 2006, p. 193-194.
  3. ^ a b Dieng 2009, p. 25.
  4. ^ Sadji 2006, p. 211.
  5. ^ Dieng 2009, p. 63.
  6. ^ a b Manga 2011, p. 123.
  7. ^ a b Gaillard 1989, p. 57.
  8. ^ Bouopda 2008, p. 93-94.
  9. ^ Nkwebo 2010.
  10. ^ Gifford 1998, p. 254-256.
  11. ^ Gaillard 1989, p. 56.
  12. ^ ChatainEpanyaMoutoudou 2011, p. 103.
  13. ^ ChatainEpanyaMoutoudou 2011, p. 104.
  14. ^ ChatainEpanyaMoutoudou 2011, p. 104-105.
  15. ^ a b c ChatainEpanyaMoutoudou 2011, p. 105.
  16. ^ a b ChatainEpanyaMoutoudou 2011, p. 150.
  17. ^ a b Gaillard 1989, p. 58.
  18. ^ Dieng 2009, p. 24.
  19. ^ Sadji 2006, p. 204.
  20. ^ Moffa 1995, p. 266.
  21. ^ Traore 1983, p. 38.

Sources

  • Bouopda, Pierre Kamé (April 2008). Cameroun du protectorat vers la démocratie: 1884–1992 (in French). Harmattan. ISBN 978-2-296-19604-9. Retrieved 27 July 2012.
  • Chatain, Jean; Epanya, Augusta; Moutoudou, Albert (1 September 2011). Kamerun, l'indépendance piégée: De la lutte de libération à la lutte contre le néocolonialisme (in French). L'Harmattan. ISBN 978-2-296-55523-5. Retrieved 1 August 2012.
  • Dieng, Amady Aly (May 2009). Les Grands Combats de la FEANF (Fédération des Etudiants d'Afrique noire): De Bandung aux indépendances – 1955–1960 (in French). Harmattan. ISBN 978-2-296-22659-3. Retrieved 30 July 2012.
  • Gaillard, Philippe (1989). Le Cameroun. L'Harmattan. ISBN 978-2-7384-0510-4. Retrieved 1 August 2012.
  • Gifford, Paul (1998). African Christianity: its public role. Indiana University Press. ISBN 978-0-253-33417-6. Retrieved 27 July 2012.
  • Manga, Jocelyn Olomo (November 2011). Les divisions au coeur de l'UPC: Contribution à la connaissance de l'histoire politique du Cameroun. Harmattan. ISBN 978-2-296-47320-1. Retrieved 1 August 2012.
  • Messina, Jean-Paul; Slageren, Jaap Van (2005). Histoire du christianisme au Cameroun: des origines à nos jours : approche oecuménique (in French). KARTHALA Editions. ISBN 978-2-84586-687-4. Retrieved 28 July 2012.
  • Moffa, Claudio (December 1995). L'Afrique à la périphérie de l'histoire. Harmattan. ISBN 978-2-296-28608-5. Retrieved 1 August 2012.
  • Nkwebo, Denis (17 February 2010). "Ernest Ouandié : Le "maquisard" promu héros national". Quotidien Le jour – Cameroun (in French). Retrieved 27 July 2012.
  • Sadji, Amadou Booker (May 2006). Le rôle de la génération charnière ouest-africaine: Indépendance et développement. Harmattan. ISBN 978-2-296-14573-3. Retrieved 1 August 2012.
  • Traore, Sékou (1983). Les intellectuels africains face au marxisme. Harmattan. ISBN 978-2-296-29705-0. Retrieved 1 August 2012.

osendé, afana, castor, 1930, march, 1966, marxist, economist, militant, nationalist, died, 1966, while, fighting, guerrilla, against, government, cameroon, castor, born1930ngoksa, near, centre, region, cameroondied15, march, 1966, 1966, aged, ndélélé, cameroon. Castor Osende Afana 1930 15 March 1966 was a Marxist economist and militant nationalist who died in 1966 while fighting as a guerrilla against the government of Cameroon Castor Osende AfanaBorn1930Ngoksa near Sa a Centre Region CameroonDied15 March 1966 1966 03 15 aged 35 36 Ndelele CameroonNationalityCameroonianOccupationEconomist Contents 1 Early years 2 UPC leadership in exile 3 Guerilla 4 Publications and views 5 ReferencesEarly years EditCastor Osende Afana was born in 1930 in Ngoksa near Sa a in the Centre Region of Cameroon In 1948 he was admitted to the seminary at Mvolye where he became a strong friend of Albert Ndongmo the future Bishop of Nkongsamba He left the seminary in 1950 and became a militant nationalist 1 At that time Eastern Cameroon was under French colonial rule and would not gain independence until 1960 Afana joined the Union of the Peoples of Cameroon UPC a left wing movement agitating for independence and led by Ruben Um Nyobe Osende Afana went to Toulouse France to study Economic Science and by 1956 was a vice president of the Black African Students Federation in France Federation des etudiants d Afrique noire en France FEANF and was managing director of the FEANF organ L Etudiant d Afrique noire 2 As a UPC militant he ensured that the issues of Cameroon were well covered 3 While he was managing director the moderate viewpoint of the magazine shifted to a harder and more incisive tone 4 In 1958 Osende Afana was General Treasurer of FEANF as well as being responsible for the UPC in France 5 In 1958 after Ruben Um Nyobe died Osende Afana decided to abandon his thesis and rejoin the leadership of the UPC proposing himself as a candidate for the new Secretary General Nyobe s successor Felix Roland Moumie told him There is no longer a Secretary General There was one he is dead that is it However Osende Afana was designated UPC representative at the Afro Asian People s Solidarity Conference in Cairo in December 1957 January 1958 The conference was dominated by supporters of the Chinese version of communism and later Osende s Maoism was to arouse suspicions with the UPC leadership in Accra 6 Osende Afana completed his studies in Paris in September 1962 and travelled to Accra 7 UPC leadership in exile EditIn April and May 1955 the UPC held a series of angry meetings circulated pamphlets and organised strikes On 13 July 1955 the French government dissolved the UPC by decree Most of the UPC leaders moved to Kumba in the British administered Southern Cameroons to avoid being jailed by the colonial power 8 In July 1957 under pressure from the French the British authorities in western Cameroon deported the leaders of the UPC to Khartoum Sudan They moved in turn to Cairo Egypt to Conakry Guinea and finally to Accra Ghana 9 After Cameroon gained independence in 1960 UPC rebels who had been fighting the French colonial government continued to fight the government of President Ahmadou Ahidjo whom they considered to be a puppet of the French 10 On 6 September 1962 the UPC leadership in exile met in Accra at Ndeh Ntumazah s house and decided to exclude the criminal clique of Woungly from the administrative secretariat 11 At ten that evening when the attendees were about to leave a bomb exploded without causing any injury The Ghana authorities were not amused and threw the entire UPC leadership in jail In October they freed Massaga Tchaptchet and Ntumazah but kept Abel Kingue in prison 7 On 13 September 1962 the UPC organised its first Assemblee populaire sous maquis in Mungo where the Revolutionary Committee was named The committee was presided over by Ernest Ouandie Other members were Abel Kingue Michel Ndoh Ndongo Diye Osende Afana Nicanor Njiawe and Woungly Massaga 12 A two headed leadership was theoretically in place with Abel Kingue leading the exiles from Ghana and Ernest Ouandie in the maquis The organisation functioned poorly due to communication problems and also to the Sino Soviet split The next year it split with Abel Kingue and Osende Afana allied with Ntumazah and opposed to the other leaders 13 Guerilla Edit nbsp Baka people of Eastern CameroonIn 1963 Osende Afana left Cairo Egypt where he had taken refuge He travelled to Conakry Guinea and then to Accra Ghana where he met the core of the leadership in exile He spent the following months in Brazzaville before secretly entering Cameroon with the intent of establishing a new maquis a second front in the Moloundou region a corner of Cameroon that borders the Republic of the Congo In August 1963 there had been a popular revolution in Congo Brazzaville in which the neo colonial regime of Fulbert Youlou was replaced by a government led by Alphonse Massemba Debat This government was relatively friendly to the UPC rebels opening the possibility of supply from the Congo 14 Details of his activity in the period that followed are sketchy but Osende Afana seems to have made several visits to the extremely poor Moloundou region where he made contact with the local people mostly Bakas 15 On 1 September 1965 a small party led by Asana entered Moloundou mainly aiming to educate the people rather than start an uprising but was forced to leave quickly 16 He intended to establish a politico administrative organisation on Maoist lines but the population of this very backward part of Cameroon was not receptive to these ideas 17 A few months later Osende Afana s small group returned to Moloundou By 5 March 1966 they had been detected and encircled by troops that were far more at home in the forest than they were Osende a myopic intellectual lost his spectacles and his sandals 17 On 15 March 1966 his party was ambushed by a Cameroon army unit 16 He did not take flight as did most of his companions Taken prisoner he was killed and decapitated and his head was flown by helicopter to Yaounde so that President Ahmadou Ahidjo could look into the eyes of the dead man 15 Publications and views EditOsende Afana s article Justice pour le Cameroun Justice for Cameroon appeared in the first issue of L Etudiant d Afrique noire The Black African Student in 1956 It included a short but complete overview of the French and British colonial rule in Cameroon including the annexation of various parts of the territory to Nigeria 18 In issue 8 January 1857 he published an important article Pour ou contre L Etudian d Afrique Noire 19 In February 1957 Afana gave his study Le Kamerun en lutte to the fourth United Nations commission and in July 1957 published L Etat sous tutelle de Cameroun The Trust State of Cameroon 3 Osende Afana was the author of a thesis on economics that was published in the year of his death 15 In the 1950s and 1960s there was rivalry between the Chinese and Soviet communist parties Osende Afana aligned himself with the Chinese who seemed more revolutionary in their views than the Soviets 6 He theorised on the existence of a primitive communism in the pre colonial era but noted the existence of contradictions in the social and inter tribal structures and the relations between the sexes and the generations 20 In a brochure published after his death Osende Afana gave the standard Marxist viewpoint The proletariat is the most revolutionary class Some say that in Africa it is the peasantry that is the most exploited but anyway it is the proletariat that is most conscious of their exploitation 21 References EditCitations Messina amp Slageren 2005 p 375 Sadji 2006 p 193 194 a b Dieng 2009 p 25 Sadji 2006 p 211 Dieng 2009 p 63 a b Manga 2011 p 123 a b Gaillard 1989 p 57 Bouopda 2008 p 93 94 Nkwebo 2010 Gifford 1998 p 254 256 Gaillard 1989 p 56 ChatainEpanyaMoutoudou 2011 p 103 ChatainEpanyaMoutoudou 2011 p 104 ChatainEpanyaMoutoudou 2011 p 104 105 a b c ChatainEpanyaMoutoudou 2011 p 105 a b ChatainEpanyaMoutoudou 2011 p 150 a b Gaillard 1989 p 58 Dieng 2009 p 24 Sadji 2006 p 204 Moffa 1995 p 266 Traore 1983 p 38 Sources Bouopda Pierre Kame April 2008 Cameroun du protectorat vers la democratie 1884 1992 in French Harmattan ISBN 978 2 296 19604 9 Retrieved 27 July 2012 Chatain Jean Epanya Augusta Moutoudou Albert 1 September 2011 Kamerun l independance piegee De la lutte de liberation a la lutte contre le neocolonialisme in French L Harmattan ISBN 978 2 296 55523 5 Retrieved 1 August 2012 Dieng Amady Aly May 2009 Les Grands Combats de la FEANF Federation des Etudiants d Afrique noire De Bandung aux independances 1955 1960 in French Harmattan ISBN 978 2 296 22659 3 Retrieved 30 July 2012 Gaillard Philippe 1989 Le Cameroun L Harmattan ISBN 978 2 7384 0510 4 Retrieved 1 August 2012 Gifford Paul 1998 African Christianity its public role Indiana University Press ISBN 978 0 253 33417 6 Retrieved 27 July 2012 Manga Jocelyn Olomo November 2011 Les divisions au coeur de l UPC Contribution a la connaissance de l histoire politique du Cameroun Harmattan ISBN 978 2 296 47320 1 Retrieved 1 August 2012 Messina Jean Paul Slageren Jaap Van 2005 Histoire du christianisme au Cameroun des origines a nos jours approche oecumenique in French KARTHALA Editions ISBN 978 2 84586 687 4 Retrieved 28 July 2012 Moffa Claudio December 1995 L Afrique a la peripherie de l histoire Harmattan ISBN 978 2 296 28608 5 Retrieved 1 August 2012 Nkwebo Denis 17 February 2010 Ernest Ouandie Le maquisard promu heros national Quotidien Le jour Cameroun in French Retrieved 27 July 2012 Sadji Amadou Booker May 2006 Le role de la generation charniere ouest africaine Independance et developpement Harmattan ISBN 978 2 296 14573 3 Retrieved 1 August 2012 Traore Sekou 1983 Les intellectuels africains face au marxisme Harmattan ISBN 978 2 296 29705 0 Retrieved 1 August 2012 Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Osende Afana amp oldid 1113037532, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

article

, read, download, free, free download, mp3, video, mp4, 3gp, jpg, jpeg, gif, png, picture, music, song, movie, book, game, games.