fbpx
Wikipedia

Bakassi conflict

The Bakassi conflict is an ongoing insurgency which started in 2006, in the Bakassi Peninsula of Cameroon waged by local separatists against Cameroonian government forces. After the independence of Cameroon and Nigeria the border between them was not settled and there were other disputes. The Nigerian government claimed the border was that prior to the British–German agreements in 1913, and Cameroon claimed the border laid down by the British–German agreements. The border dispute worsened in the 1980s and 1990s after some border incidents occurred, which almost caused a war between the two countries.

Bakassi conflict
Part of the conflict in the Niger Delta and the piracy in the Gulf of Guinea

The Bakassi Peninsula in the Bight of Bonny
DateMain insurgency:
2 July 2006 – 25 September 2009
Sporadic clashes
25 September 2009 – Present
Location4°30′N 8°36′E / 4.5°N 8.6°E / 4.5; 8.6Coordinates: 4°30′N 8°36′E / 4.5°N 8.6°E / 4.5; 8.6
Status

Low-level conflict ongoing

  • An amnesty deal was established with some of the rebels.
  • BFF, Niger Delta militants, and Biafran separatists continue the fight.
Belligerents
 Cameroon Democratic Republic of Bakassi
Biafran separatists
Pro-Nigerian militias
Commanders and leaders
René Claude Meka
Paul Biya
Tony Ene Asuquo 
Princewill Chimezie Richard[1]
Units involved

Cameroon Armed Forces

Bakassi groups

Niger Delta groups

Biafra separatist groups

  • BNL
Strength
Unknown Unknown
Casualties and losses
50 killed (2008)
1,700 internally displaced
class=notpageimage|
Location of the Bakassi Peninsula in Africa

In 1994 Cameroon went to the International Court of Justice (ICJ) to avoid war with Nigeria after many armed clashes occurred in the disputed regions. Eight years later the ICJ ruled in Cameroon's favour and confirmed the 1913 border made by the British and Germans as the international border between the two countries. Nigeria confirmed it would transfer Bakassi to Cameroon.

In June 2006 Nigeria signed the Greentree Agreement, which marked the formal transfer of authority in the region, and the Nigerian Army partly withdrew from Bakassi. The move was opposed by many Bakassians who considered themselves Nigerians and they started to arm themselves on 2 July 2006. Two years later the Nigerian Army fully withdrew from the peninsula and it transitioned to Cameroonian control. More than 50 people were killed between the start of the conflict and the full withdrawal of the Nigerians. The conflict largely ended on 25 September 2009 with an amnesty deal. Since then sporadic clashes have occurred in Bakassi. Only one local group, the Bakassi Freedom Fighters (BFF), and militants from the Niger Delta as well as Biafran separatists continue to fight.

Background

Early years of disputes

After the independence of both Nigeria and Cameroon in 1960,[2][3] the status of British Cameroons was unclear. A United Nations-sponsored and supervised plebiscite took place the following February resulting in the northern part of the territory voting to remain part of Nigeria, while the southern part voted for reunification with Cameroon.[2] The northern part of British Cameroons was transferred to Nigeria the following June, while the southern part joined Cameroon in October.[4] However, the land and maritime boundaries between Nigeria and Cameroon were not clearly demarcated. One of the resultant disputes was in the Bakassi Peninsula, an area with large oil and gas reserves,[5] which had been de facto administered by Nigeria.[6] In the early 1960s, Nigeria recognised that the peninsula was not a historical part of Nigeria.[3] Nigeria claimed that the British had made an agreement with the local chiefs for protection, and that the resultant border of 1884 should be the official border. Cameroon claimed that the British–German border agreements in 1913 should demarcate the border between the two countries.[7][8] The dispute was not a major issue between the two countries until the Nigerian President, Yakubu Gowon, was overthrown by General Murtala Mohammed in July 1975. Mohammed claimed that Gowon had agreed to transfer Bakassi to Cameroon when he signed the Maroua Declaration in June. Mohammed's government never ratified the agreement, while Cameroon regarded it as being in force.[9]

Border conflict

In the 1980s tensions rose at the border; with the two countries nearly going to war on 16 May 1981, when five Nigerian soldiers were killed during border clashes. Nigeria claimed that Cameroonian soldiers fired first on the Nigerian patrol. Cameroon claimed Nigerian soldiers opened fire against a Cameroonian vessel close to Bakassi[10] and that Nigeria violated international law in Cameroon's territory.[10][11] There were two further armed incidents in February 1987 in the Lake Chad region; three Cameroonians were kidnapped and tortured by the Nigerians.[12] That same year Cameroonian gendarmes attacked 16 villages around Lake Chad and exchanged the Cameroonian flag for the Nigerian flag.[11] Another incident occurred on 13 May 1989 when Nigerian soldiers boarded and inspected a Cameroonian fishing boat close to Lake Chad.[13] In April 1990 Nigerian soldiers kidnapped and tortured two people. A couple of months later Nigeria claimed that Cameroon was annexing nine fishing settlements on the peninsula.[14] Between April 1990 and April 1991 Nigerian soldiers made a number of incursions into the town of Jabane; on one occasion replacing the Cameroonian flag with the Nigerian standard. The following July the Nigerians occupied the town of Kontcha. The Nigerian Army made veiled threats that it would occupy some areas around Lake Chad.[15] A 1992–1993 Cameroonian attack in Lake Chad resulted in the oppression of Nigerians, some of whom were killed and the rest subject to discriminatory taxation.[11] Despite years of negotiations between the two countries, their relations became worse after Nigerian soldiers occupied Jabane and Diamond Island in the Bakassi Peninsula on 17 November 1993.[14]

Soon thereafter Nigeria accused the Cameroonian Army of having launched incursions into Bakassi and in response sent 500–1,000 soldiers to protect its citizens on the peninsula in December.[14] Tensions rose when both Nigeria and Cameroon sent additional forces to Bakassi on 21 December.[16] The following January the Cameroonians killed an unknown number of Nigerian citizens. On 17 February 1994, the Nigeria-occupied territory close to Lake Chad received 3,000 refugees from the village of Karena after they fled from a violent crackdown by the Cameroonians. During the crackdown 55 people were burnt alive; 90 others were wounded and parts of the village were torched as well. Soon after another incident was reported close to the Cameroon–Nigeria frontier; Cameroonian gendarmes attacked the village of Abana in Cross River State over the border, killing 6 people and sinking 14 fishing boats.[17] On 18–19 February, Nigerian forces attacked the Cameroonians and occupied now the full peninsula including the villages of Akwa,[18] Archibong, Atabong, and Kawa Bana.[19] Between 1–25 people were killed in the clashes.[20] On 29 March, Cameroon referred the matter to the International Court of Justice (ICJ).[21] In early August 1995 heavy fighting took place, and local sources claim that 30 people were killed; this was never officially confirmed.[22] On 3 February 1996, another clash occurred, resulting in several casualties.[23] After these armed incidents, Nigeria alleged that France had deployed soldiers in the region. France stated that it had stationed two helicopters and fifteen paratroopers in Cameroon, but had not deployed to the peninsula. Between late 1999 and early 2000 French forces established a military base close to the disputed territory. The fighting between 1995 to 2005 is believed to have claimed 70 lives.[14]

Prelude

In 2001, the Cameroonian Army suffered two killed and eleven missing in what was described at the time as a pirate attack.[24] On 10 October 2002, the ICJ determined that Cameroon was the rightful owner of the peninsula.[25] In Bakassi, there were at least 300,000 Nigerians, at the time they made up 90 per cent of the population. They had to choose between giving up their Nigerian nationality; keeping it and being treated as foreign nationals;[24] or leaving the peninsula and moving to Nigeria.[14] The United Nations (UN) supported the ICJ verdict, putting pressure on Nigeria to accept it.[26] The Nigerian President, Olusegun Obasanjo, had attracted a lot of criticism from the international community and from within Nigeria.[27] He grudgingly accepted the judgement, although he did not immediately withdraw the Nigerian forces from the peninsula.[27][28] An agreement was signed to start demarcating the entire Nigerian-Cameroonian border; owing to contradicting reference points from colonial maps, as of February 2021, this process has yet to be completed.[29]

On 12 June 2006, Nigeria and Cameroon signed the Greentree Agreement, allowing Nigeria to keep its civil administration in Bakassi for another two years. The Nigerian Army agreed to withdraw at least 3,000 soldiers[5] within 60 days.[14] it also agreed to give back a part to Cameroon.[30] Following the agreement, a Bakassian delegation threatened to declare independence if the handover was carried out.[28] On 2 July 2006 the Bakassi Movement for Self-Determination (BAMOSD) announced that it would join the Movement for the Emancipation of the Niger Delta (MEND) to secede from Cameroon and on the 9th, they carried out the threat. They and the Southern Cameroons People's Organisation (SCAPO) declared the independence of the "Democratic Republic of Bakassi".[31] The separatists were supported by Biafran separatist rebels.[32] Nigeria's Senate claimed in November 2007 that ceding Bakassi was illegal, but this action by the senate had no effect.[27]

Main phase of the conflict

 
Flag of the Democratic Republic of Bakassi, as proposed by BAMOSD.

René Claude Meka, the Cameroon Chief of Staff, was tasked with securing the territory by deploying the Rapid Intervention Battalion (BIR).[33] The insurgency was largely sea-based and the mangroves of Bakassi offered the insurgents hiding places. They used pirate tactics in their struggle: attacking ships, kidnapping sailors and carrying out seaborne raids on targets as far away as Limbe and Douala.[34] Nigeria also faced insurgent attacks, as rebels in the southern part of the country were fiercely opposed to the border change.[35] On 17 August 2006 the leader of BAMOSD died in a car accident together with 20 others in Cross River State.[36]

Clashes occurred in the region between suspected Nigerian soldiers and Cameroon soldiers on 13 November 2007, in which 21 Cameroonian soldiers died. Nigeria denied involvement in the clashes and claimed its soldiers were also attacked by an unknown armed group; it also claimed none of its soldiers were killed. The region was beset by both Nigerian criminals and rebels;[37] and a previously unknown rebel group called the Liberators of the Southern Cameroon (LSCP) claimed responsibility for some killings.[38] More Cameroon soldiers were killed in attacks in June and July 2008.[35] On 14 August, Nigeria officially withdrew from Bakassi, with 50 people having been killed in the previous year.[30] In October 2008 a militant group known as the Bakassi Freedom Fighters (BFF) boarded a ship and took its crew hostage, threatening to execute them unless the Cameroon government agreed to negotiate on Bakassian independence.[35] This BFF action failed to impact the policies of Nigeria and Cameroon regarding the peninsula. On 14 August 2009 Cameroon assumed complete control of Bakassi.[35] On 25 September an amnesty offer was made and most Bakassian militias surrendered their weapons and returned to civilian life.[34]

The BFF refused to surrender; joining forces with militants in the Niger Delta, they declared that they would destroy the local economy.[39] In December 2009 a police officer was killed off Bakassi in a motorised canoe and the BFF claimed responsibility.[34] On 6 to 7 February 2011, the rebels launched an attack at Limbe and killed two Cameroonians, wounded one, and eleven were missing.[40] In 2012, the BAMOSD launched a national flag[39] and declared independence on 9 August. On the 16th they captured two Cameroonians.[41] In 2013, Cameroon launched a violent crackdown, causing 1,700 people to flee. This angered many Nigerians and prompted the Nigerian government to threaten military intervention. This intervention never materialised.[42]

Aftermath and low-level insurgency

After the agreement, many residents had problems with establishing the recognition of their nationalities in both countries. A lack of identification documents made some Nigerians[43] at risk of becoming stateless, after the ceding of Bakassi.[43][44] Since the ceding of Bakassi the Cameroonians have been brutalising and harassing the local Nigerians. According to the academic Agbor Beckly the Cameroonian police want them to leave.[45] Due to the discrimination of the Cameroonians against the locals, most of them were afraid and were in risk to becoming stateless, and many of them decided to not register their children as Cameroonians.[43] On 15 August 2013 the Cameroon government gained full sovereignty over Bakassi and the residents had to pay their first taxes after a 5-year tax-free transition.[6] While militant activity in Bakassi gradually subsided, the cause of the conflict remains unresolved. Since September 2008 more than a third of the local Nigerian population has fled to Nigeria.[5] On 13 February 2015, militants killed a policeman and kidnapped another.[46] In 2017 a diplomatic crisis erupted when it was reported that Cameroonian soldiers had killed 97 Nigerian citizens in Bakassi.[47] This report turned out to be false, and Cameroon subsequently dismissed two village chiefs whom it found responsible for spreading the false news.[48]

By 2018, a major rebellion had broken out in the Cameroon's Anglophone territories which included Bakassi.[49] In May 2019 it was reported that Cameroon police had destroyed the fishing community of Abana, killing at least 40 people.[50] The authorities denied that police personnel had been involved, and blamed a local militia. According to the state government, Cameroonian soldiers subsequently moved into Abana and arrested 15 people suspected of having participated in the killings.[51]

In January 2021, the Biafra Nations League (BNL) complained that some of its members as well as pro-Ambazonian activists had been arrested and tortured by Cameroonian soldiers, both in Bakassi and on Nigerian territory. The group said that they would hoist the Biafran flag in the Bakassi Peninsula, and claimed that the locals identified more as Biafrans than as Cameroonians. The group have asked oil companies to quit and threatened to carry arms against Cameroon. [52] A few months later, the group declared that it would not allow Cameroon to keep control of Bakassi, and claimed that several local militias on the peninsula were loyal to the Biafran cause. The BNL leadership argued that the growing insurgency in Southeastern Nigeria would allow Biafran loyalists to capture Bakassi, and threatened to launch pirate raids in the nearby waters.[1] On 8 November 2021, the BNL took control of a border crossing between Akpabuyo and Bakassi, blocking the road leading to the peninsula and raising the Biafran flag. The militants retreated before a Nigerian Armed Forces contingent arrived at the location.[53] In the next weeks, the BNL claimed to had seized territory in Bakassi.[54] On 13 April, a BNL commander was killed by the Cameroonian military in Idabato, Bakassi.[55] On July 23, five Cameroonian soldiers were killed when they invaded a BNL camp in Bakassi; the BNL lost one fighter during the clash.[56]

References

  1. ^ a b "Your alliance is Dead on arrival - Biafra Nations League, BNL, tells Buhari, Biya". The Nigerian Voice. 14 July 2021. Retrieved 25 November 2021.
  2. ^ a b "Cameroon: Moving Toward Independence". Encyclopædia Britannica. from the original on 5 October 2019. Retrieved 25 October 2019.
  3. ^ a b Ngalim, p. 6.
  4. ^ "Independent Nigeria". Encyclopædia Britannica. from the original on 5 October 2019. Retrieved 25 October 2019.
  5. ^ a b c "The Lifelong Consequences of a Little-Known Nigeria–Cameroon Land Dispute". TRT World. 16 May 2019. from the original on 25 October 2019. Retrieved 25 October 2019.
  6. ^ a b "Cameroon Forces 'Kill 97 Nigerian Fishermen' in Bakassi". BBC News. 14 July 2017. from the original on 2 June 2018. Retrieved 25 October 2019.
  7. ^ Ngalim, p. 2.
  8. ^ Lukong, p. 2.
  9. ^ Ngalim, p. 1.
  10. ^ a b Egede & Igiehon, p. 2.
  11. ^ a b c Akinyemi, p. 14.
  12. ^ Lukong, p. 47.
  13. ^ Lukong, p. 48.
  14. ^ a b c d e f "Cameroon – Nigeria". Uppsala Conflict Data Program. from the original on 26 October 2019. Retrieved 26 October 2019.
  15. ^ Lukong, p. 50.
  16. ^ Lukong, p. 51.
  17. ^ "Government of Cameroon - Civilians". Uppsala Conflict Data Program. Retrieved 17 November 2019.
  18. ^ Lukong, pp. 51–52.
  19. ^ Akanle & Adésìnà, p. 346.
  20. ^ Gibler, p. 435.
  21. ^ Udeoji, p. 92.
  22. ^ "General Information". Uppsala Conflict Data Program. from the original on 26 October 2019. Retrieved 26 October 2019.
  23. ^ Lukong, p. 54.
  24. ^ a b "Cameroon Takes Control of Disputed Bakassi". VOA News. 14 August 2013. from the original on 25 October 2019. Retrieved 25 October 2019.
  25. ^ Udeoji, p. 93.
  26. ^ "Cameroon–Nigeria Mixed Commission". UNOWAS. from the original on 15 July 2019. Retrieved 25 October 2019.
  27. ^ a b c "Bakassi Peninsula Dispute". Encyclopædia Britannica. from the original on 26 October 2019. Retrieved 26 October 2019.
  28. ^ a b . This Day Online. Archived from the original on 13 August 2009. Retrieved 18 January 2009.
  29. ^ Cameroon – Nigeria: Will there be a defined border soon?, The Africa Report, Feb 2, 2021. Accessed Feb 2, 2021.
  30. ^ a b "Nigeria cedes Bakassi to Cameroon". BBC News. 14 August 2008. Retrieved 12 January 2020.
  31. ^ "Rebels Declare 'Independence' of Bakassi". Up Station Mountain Club. 31 July 2008. from the original on 17 May 2019. Retrieved 26 October 2019.
  32. ^ "Troops Clash With Militants, Pirates in Niger Delta – Sahara Reporters". Sahara Reporters. 9 November 2016. from the original on 6 November 2018. Retrieved 26 October 2018.
  33. ^ "70 ans, chef d'État-major des armées" [70, Chief of Staff of the Armed] (in French). 27 April 2009. from the original on 1 September 2019. Retrieved 26 October 2019.
  34. ^ a b c "Cameroon Rebels Threaten Security in Oil-Rich Gulf of Guinea". Jamestown Foundation. 24 November 2010. from the original on 29 August 2018. Retrieved 26 October 2019.
  35. ^ a b c d Ngalim, p. 10.
  36. ^ "Nigeria: Bakassi Leader Dies in Auto Accident". AllAfrica. 18 August 2006. Retrieved 26 October 2016. (registration required)
  37. ^ "Up to 21 Cameroon Troops Killed in Bakassi". 13 November 2007. Retrieved 28 November 2019.
  38. ^ Amoah, p. 156.
  39. ^ a b Ngalim, pp. 10–11.
  40. ^ Ngwa & Funteh, p. 343.
  41. ^ "Cameroun : le sort des " apatrides " de Bakassi réveille l'instabilité de la presqu'île" [Cameroon: The Plight of 'Stateless' Bakassi Peninsula Creates Instability]. Jeune Afrique (in French). 24 August 2012. from the original on 26 October 2019. Retrieved 26 October 2019.
  42. ^ Ngalim, p. 12.
  43. ^ a b c Institute on Statelessness and Inclusion, p. 3.
  44. ^ "We're Now Stateless, Bakassi Indigenes Cry Out". Vanguard. 10 June 2017. from the original on 2 October 2019. Retrieved 31 October 2019.
  45. ^ Beckly, pp. 67–68, 93.
  46. ^ Ngwane, p. 2.
  47. ^ "Killing of 97 in Bakassi Sparks Diplomatic Row Between Cameroon, Nigeria". Journal du Cameroun. 17 July 2017. from the original on 12 August 2019. Retrieved 26 October 2019.
  48. ^ "Cameroon–Nigeria Row: Two Bakassi Chiefs Dethroned". Journal du Cameroun. 26 July 2017. from the original on 16 July 2019. Retrieved 26 October 2019.
  49. ^ "Anglophone Cameroon's Separatist Conflict Gets Bloodier". Reuters. 1 June 2018. Retrieved 7 November 2019.
  50. ^ "Nigeria: Cameroonian Gendarmes Kill Scores of Nigerians in Akwa Ibom". AllAfrica. 8 May 2019. from the original on 8 May 2019. Retrieved 26 October 2019.
  51. ^ "Killings at Fishing Settlement Not by Camerounian Gendarmes – A'Ibom Govt". Independent. 8 May 2019. Retrieved 26 October 2019.
  52. ^ Soldiers arrest Chief of Staff of Biafra group, members, Daily Post, Jan 18, 2021. Accessed Jan 21, 2021.
  53. ^ "Renewed border tension: Biafra League barricades entrance to Bakassi, hoist flag". National Daily. 8 November 2021. Retrieved 17 November 2021.
  54. ^ "Biafra League encroaches Cameroon border, hoists Biafra flag at Bakassi Peninsula entrance". National Daily. 21 November 2021. Retrieved 25 November 2021.
  55. ^ "Cameroonian Military Kills Biafra Nations League Commander". Sahara Reporters. 16 April 2022. Retrieved 16 April 2022.
  56. ^ "Casualties as Biafra group clashes with Cameroonian soldiers". Daily Post. 23 July 2022. Retrieved 24 July 2022.

Bibliography

  • Akanle, Olayinka; Adésìnà, Jìmí Olálékan (2017). The Development of Africa: Issues, Diagnoses and Prognoses. Cham, Switzerland: Springer. ISBN 978-3319-662-42-8.
  • Akinyemi, Omolara (2014). "Borders in Nigeria's Relations with Cameroon". Journal of Arts and Humanities. Cornell University Ithaca. 3 (9). ISSN 2167-9053. Retrieved 17 November 2019.
  • Amoah, M. (2011). Nationalism, Globalization, and Africa. Berlin: Springer. ISBN 978-1137-002-16-7.
  • Beckly, Agbor Tabetah (2013). The Perceptions/Views of Cameroon–Nigerian Bakassi Border Conflict by the Bakassi People (PDF) (Thesis). Historiska institutionen Uppsala universitet. pp. 67–68, 93. Retrieved 31 October 2019.
  • Egede, Edwin E.; Igiehon, Mark Osa (2017). The Bakassi Dispute and the International Court of Justice: Continuing Challenges. New York: Routledge. ISBN 978-1317-040-74-3.
  • Gibler, Douglas M. (2018). International Conflicts, 1816–2010: Militarized Interstate Dispute Narratives. Lanham, Maryland: Rowman & Littlefield. ISBN 978-1442-275-59-1.
  • Institute on Statelessness and Inclusion (2018). "Submission to the Human Rights Council at the 30th Session of the Universal Periodic Review: (Third Cycle, May 2018)" (PDF). Institute on Statelessness and Inclusion. Retrieved 5 November 2019. {{cite journal}}: Cite journal requires |journal= (help)
  • Lukong, Hilary V. (2011). The Cameroon–Nigeria Border Dispute. Management and Resolution, 1981–2011. Mankon, Bamenda: African Books Collective. pp. 2, 47–48, 50–52. ISBN 978-9956-717-59-0.
  • Ngalim, Aloysius Nyuymengka (2016). "African Boundary Conflicts and International Mediation: The Absence of Inclusivity in Mediating the Bakassi Peninsula Conflict" (PDF). Social Science Research Council. 9: 1–2. Retrieved 25 October 2019.
  • Ngwa, Canute Ambe; Funteh, Mark Bolak (2019). Crossing the Line in Africa: Reconsidering and Unlimiting the Limits of Borders within a Contemporary Value. Bermandan, Cameroon: Langaa RPCIG. ISBN 978-9956-550-89-0.
  • Ngwane, George (2015). "Preventing Renewed Violence Through Peace Building in the Bakassi Peninsula (Cameroon)" (PDF). Jimbi Central. Retrieved 26 October 2019.
  • Udeoji, Angela Ebele (2013). "The Bakassi Peninsula Zone of Nigeria and Cameroon: The Politics of History in Contemporary African Border Disputes" (PDF). International Journal of Social Sciences and Humanities Reviews. National Open University of Nigeria. 4 (2): 92–93. ISSN 2276-8645. S2CID 151691502. Retrieved 25 October 2019.

bakassi, conflict, ongoing, insurgency, which, started, 2006, bakassi, peninsula, cameroon, waged, local, separatists, against, cameroonian, government, forces, after, independence, cameroon, nigeria, border, between, them, settled, there, were, other, dispute. The Bakassi conflict is an ongoing insurgency which started in 2006 in the Bakassi Peninsula of Cameroon waged by local separatists against Cameroonian government forces After the independence of Cameroon and Nigeria the border between them was not settled and there were other disputes The Nigerian government claimed the border was that prior to the British German agreements in 1913 and Cameroon claimed the border laid down by the British German agreements The border dispute worsened in the 1980s and 1990s after some border incidents occurred which almost caused a war between the two countries Bakassi conflictPart of the conflict in the Niger Delta and the piracy in the Gulf of GuineaThe Bakassi Peninsula in the Bight of BonnyDateMain insurgency 2 July 2006 25 September 2009Sporadic clashes25 September 2009 PresentLocationBakassi Gulf of Guinea4 30 N 8 36 E 4 5 N 8 6 E 4 5 8 6 Coordinates 4 30 N 8 36 E 4 5 N 8 6 E 4 5 8 6StatusLow level conflict ongoing An amnesty deal was established with some of the rebels BFF Niger Delta militants and Biafran separatists continue the fight Belligerents CameroonDemocratic Republic of Bakassi Biafran separatistsPro Nigerian militiasCommanders and leadersRene Claude Meka Paul BiyaTony Ene Asuquo Princewill Chimezie Richard 1 Units involvedCameroon Armed Forces Army Navy Gendarmerie BIRBakassi groups BAMOSD BFF SCAPO LSCP BSDFNiger Delta groups MENDBiafra separatist groups BNLStrengthUnknownUnknownCasualties and losses50 killed 2008 1 700 internally displacedclass notpageimage Location of the Bakassi Peninsula in AfricaIn 1994 Cameroon went to the International Court of Justice ICJ to avoid war with Nigeria after many armed clashes occurred in the disputed regions Eight years later the ICJ ruled in Cameroon s favour and confirmed the 1913 border made by the British and Germans as the international border between the two countries Nigeria confirmed it would transfer Bakassi to Cameroon In June 2006 Nigeria signed the Greentree Agreement which marked the formal transfer of authority in the region and the Nigerian Army partly withdrew from Bakassi The move was opposed by many Bakassians who considered themselves Nigerians and they started to arm themselves on 2 July 2006 Two years later the Nigerian Army fully withdrew from the peninsula and it transitioned to Cameroonian control More than 50 people were killed between the start of the conflict and the full withdrawal of the Nigerians The conflict largely ended on 25 September 2009 with an amnesty deal Since then sporadic clashes have occurred in Bakassi Only one local group the Bakassi Freedom Fighters BFF and militants from the Niger Delta as well as Biafran separatists continue to fight Contents 1 Background 1 1 Early years of disputes 1 2 Border conflict 2 Prelude 3 Main phase of the conflict 4 Aftermath and low level insurgency 5 References 6 BibliographyBackground EditEarly years of disputes Edit See also Cameroon Nigeria border After the independence of both Nigeria and Cameroon in 1960 2 3 the status of British Cameroons was unclear A United Nations sponsored and supervised plebiscite took place the following February resulting in the northern part of the territory voting to remain part of Nigeria while the southern part voted for reunification with Cameroon 2 The northern part of British Cameroons was transferred to Nigeria the following June while the southern part joined Cameroon in October 4 However the land and maritime boundaries between Nigeria and Cameroon were not clearly demarcated One of the resultant disputes was in the Bakassi Peninsula an area with large oil and gas reserves 5 which had been de facto administered by Nigeria 6 In the early 1960s Nigeria recognised that the peninsula was not a historical part of Nigeria 3 Nigeria claimed that the British had made an agreement with the local chiefs for protection and that the resultant border of 1884 should be the official border Cameroon claimed that the British German border agreements in 1913 should demarcate the border between the two countries 7 8 The dispute was not a major issue between the two countries until the Nigerian President Yakubu Gowon was overthrown by General Murtala Mohammed in July 1975 Mohammed claimed that Gowon had agreed to transfer Bakassi to Cameroon when he signed the Maroua Declaration in June Mohammed s government never ratified the agreement while Cameroon regarded it as being in force 9 Border conflict Edit In the 1980s tensions rose at the border with the two countries nearly going to war on 16 May 1981 when five Nigerian soldiers were killed during border clashes Nigeria claimed that Cameroonian soldiers fired first on the Nigerian patrol Cameroon claimed Nigerian soldiers opened fire against a Cameroonian vessel close to Bakassi 10 and that Nigeria violated international law in Cameroon s territory 10 11 There were two further armed incidents in February 1987 in the Lake Chad region three Cameroonians were kidnapped and tortured by the Nigerians 12 That same year Cameroonian gendarmes attacked 16 villages around Lake Chad and exchanged the Cameroonian flag for the Nigerian flag 11 Another incident occurred on 13 May 1989 when Nigerian soldiers boarded and inspected a Cameroonian fishing boat close to Lake Chad 13 In April 1990 Nigerian soldiers kidnapped and tortured two people A couple of months later Nigeria claimed that Cameroon was annexing nine fishing settlements on the peninsula 14 Between April 1990 and April 1991 Nigerian soldiers made a number of incursions into the town of Jabane on one occasion replacing the Cameroonian flag with the Nigerian standard The following July the Nigerians occupied the town of Kontcha The Nigerian Army made veiled threats that it would occupy some areas around Lake Chad 15 A 1992 1993 Cameroonian attack in Lake Chad resulted in the oppression of Nigerians some of whom were killed and the rest subject to discriminatory taxation 11 Despite years of negotiations between the two countries their relations became worse after Nigerian soldiers occupied Jabane and Diamond Island in the Bakassi Peninsula on 17 November 1993 14 Soon thereafter Nigeria accused the Cameroonian Army of having launched incursions into Bakassi and in response sent 500 1 000 soldiers to protect its citizens on the peninsula in December 14 Tensions rose when both Nigeria and Cameroon sent additional forces to Bakassi on 21 December 16 The following January the Cameroonians killed an unknown number of Nigerian citizens On 17 February 1994 the Nigeria occupied territory close to Lake Chad received 3 000 refugees from the village of Karena after they fled from a violent crackdown by the Cameroonians During the crackdown 55 people were burnt alive 90 others were wounded and parts of the village were torched as well Soon after another incident was reported close to the Cameroon Nigeria frontier Cameroonian gendarmes attacked the village of Abana in Cross River State over the border killing 6 people and sinking 14 fishing boats 17 On 18 19 February Nigerian forces attacked the Cameroonians and occupied now the full peninsula including the villages of Akwa 18 Archibong Atabong and Kawa Bana 19 Between 1 25 people were killed in the clashes 20 On 29 March Cameroon referred the matter to the International Court of Justice ICJ 21 In early August 1995 heavy fighting took place and local sources claim that 30 people were killed this was never officially confirmed 22 On 3 February 1996 another clash occurred resulting in several casualties 23 After these armed incidents Nigeria alleged that France had deployed soldiers in the region France stated that it had stationed two helicopters and fifteen paratroopers in Cameroon but had not deployed to the peninsula Between late 1999 and early 2000 French forces established a military base close to the disputed territory The fighting between 1995 to 2005 is believed to have claimed 70 lives 14 Prelude EditIn 2001 the Cameroonian Army suffered two killed and eleven missing in what was described at the time as a pirate attack 24 On 10 October 2002 the ICJ determined that Cameroon was the rightful owner of the peninsula 25 In Bakassi there were at least 300 000 Nigerians at the time they made up 90 per cent of the population They had to choose between giving up their Nigerian nationality keeping it and being treated as foreign nationals 24 or leaving the peninsula and moving to Nigeria 14 The United Nations UN supported the ICJ verdict putting pressure on Nigeria to accept it 26 The Nigerian President Olusegun Obasanjo had attracted a lot of criticism from the international community and from within Nigeria 27 He grudgingly accepted the judgement although he did not immediately withdraw the Nigerian forces from the peninsula 27 28 An agreement was signed to start demarcating the entire Nigerian Cameroonian border owing to contradicting reference points from colonial maps as of February 2021 this process has yet to be completed 29 On 12 June 2006 Nigeria and Cameroon signed the Greentree Agreement allowing Nigeria to keep its civil administration in Bakassi for another two years The Nigerian Army agreed to withdraw at least 3 000 soldiers 5 within 60 days 14 it also agreed to give back a part to Cameroon 30 Following the agreement a Bakassian delegation threatened to declare independence if the handover was carried out 28 On 2 July 2006 the Bakassi Movement for Self Determination BAMOSD announced that it would join the Movement for the Emancipation of the Niger Delta MEND to secede from Cameroon and on the 9th they carried out the threat They and the Southern Cameroons People s Organisation SCAPO declared the independence of the Democratic Republic of Bakassi 31 The separatists were supported by Biafran separatist rebels 32 Nigeria s Senate claimed in November 2007 that ceding Bakassi was illegal but this action by the senate had no effect 27 Main phase of the conflict Edit Flag of the Democratic Republic of Bakassi as proposed by BAMOSD Rene Claude Meka the Cameroon Chief of Staff was tasked with securing the territory by deploying the Rapid Intervention Battalion BIR 33 The insurgency was largely sea based and the mangroves of Bakassi offered the insurgents hiding places They used pirate tactics in their struggle attacking ships kidnapping sailors and carrying out seaborne raids on targets as far away as Limbe and Douala 34 Nigeria also faced insurgent attacks as rebels in the southern part of the country were fiercely opposed to the border change 35 On 17 August 2006 the leader of BAMOSD died in a car accident together with 20 others in Cross River State 36 Clashes occurred in the region between suspected Nigerian soldiers and Cameroon soldiers on 13 November 2007 in which 21 Cameroonian soldiers died Nigeria denied involvement in the clashes and claimed its soldiers were also attacked by an unknown armed group it also claimed none of its soldiers were killed The region was beset by both Nigerian criminals and rebels 37 and a previously unknown rebel group called the Liberators of the Southern Cameroon LSCP claimed responsibility for some killings 38 More Cameroon soldiers were killed in attacks in June and July 2008 35 On 14 August Nigeria officially withdrew from Bakassi with 50 people having been killed in the previous year 30 In October 2008 a militant group known as the Bakassi Freedom Fighters BFF boarded a ship and took its crew hostage threatening to execute them unless the Cameroon government agreed to negotiate on Bakassian independence 35 This BFF action failed to impact the policies of Nigeria and Cameroon regarding the peninsula On 14 August 2009 Cameroon assumed complete control of Bakassi 35 On 25 September an amnesty offer was made and most Bakassian militias surrendered their weapons and returned to civilian life 34 The BFF refused to surrender joining forces with militants in the Niger Delta they declared that they would destroy the local economy 39 In December 2009 a police officer was killed off Bakassi in a motorised canoe and the BFF claimed responsibility 34 On 6 to 7 February 2011 the rebels launched an attack at Limbe and killed two Cameroonians wounded one and eleven were missing 40 In 2012 the BAMOSD launched a national flag 39 and declared independence on 9 August On the 16th they captured two Cameroonians 41 In 2013 Cameroon launched a violent crackdown causing 1 700 people to flee This angered many Nigerians and prompted the Nigerian government to threaten military intervention This intervention never materialised 42 Aftermath and low level insurgency EditSee also Anglophone Crisis and insurgency in Southeastern Nigeria After the agreement many residents had problems with establishing the recognition of their nationalities in both countries A lack of identification documents made some Nigerians 43 at risk of becoming stateless after the ceding of Bakassi 43 44 Since the ceding of Bakassi the Cameroonians have been brutalising and harassing the local Nigerians According to the academic Agbor Beckly the Cameroonian police want them to leave 45 Due to the discrimination of the Cameroonians against the locals most of them were afraid and were in risk to becoming stateless and many of them decided to not register their children as Cameroonians 43 On 15 August 2013 the Cameroon government gained full sovereignty over Bakassi and the residents had to pay their first taxes after a 5 year tax free transition 6 While militant activity in Bakassi gradually subsided the cause of the conflict remains unresolved Since September 2008 more than a third of the local Nigerian population has fled to Nigeria 5 On 13 February 2015 militants killed a policeman and kidnapped another 46 In 2017 a diplomatic crisis erupted when it was reported that Cameroonian soldiers had killed 97 Nigerian citizens in Bakassi 47 This report turned out to be false and Cameroon subsequently dismissed two village chiefs whom it found responsible for spreading the false news 48 By 2018 a major rebellion had broken out in the Cameroon s Anglophone territories which included Bakassi 49 In May 2019 it was reported that Cameroon police had destroyed the fishing community of Abana killing at least 40 people 50 The authorities denied that police personnel had been involved and blamed a local militia According to the state government Cameroonian soldiers subsequently moved into Abana and arrested 15 people suspected of having participated in the killings 51 In January 2021 the Biafra Nations League BNL complained that some of its members as well as pro Ambazonian activists had been arrested and tortured by Cameroonian soldiers both in Bakassi and on Nigerian territory The group said that they would hoist the Biafran flag in the Bakassi Peninsula and claimed that the locals identified more as Biafrans than as Cameroonians The group have asked oil companies to quit and threatened to carry arms against Cameroon 52 A few months later the group declared that it would not allow Cameroon to keep control of Bakassi and claimed that several local militias on the peninsula were loyal to the Biafran cause The BNL leadership argued that the growing insurgency in Southeastern Nigeria would allow Biafran loyalists to capture Bakassi and threatened to launch pirate raids in the nearby waters 1 On 8 November 2021 the BNL took control of a border crossing between Akpabuyo and Bakassi blocking the road leading to the peninsula and raising the Biafran flag The militants retreated before a Nigerian Armed Forces contingent arrived at the location 53 In the next weeks the BNL claimed to had seized territory in Bakassi 54 On 13 April a BNL commander was killed by the Cameroonian military in Idabato Bakassi 55 On July 23 five Cameroonian soldiers were killed when they invaded a BNL camp in Bakassi the BNL lost one fighter during the clash 56 References Edit a b Your alliance is Dead on arrival Biafra Nations League BNL tells Buhari Biya The Nigerian Voice 14 July 2021 Retrieved 25 November 2021 a b Cameroon Moving Toward Independence Encyclopaedia Britannica Archived from the original on 5 October 2019 Retrieved 25 October 2019 a b Ngalim p 6 Independent Nigeria Encyclopaedia Britannica Archived from the original on 5 October 2019 Retrieved 25 October 2019 a b c The Lifelong Consequences of a Little Known Nigeria Cameroon Land Dispute TRT World 16 May 2019 Archived from the original on 25 October 2019 Retrieved 25 October 2019 a b Cameroon Forces Kill 97 Nigerian Fishermen in Bakassi BBC News 14 July 2017 Archived from the original on 2 June 2018 Retrieved 25 October 2019 Ngalim p 2 Lukong p 2 Ngalim p 1 a b Egede amp Igiehon p 2 a b c Akinyemi p 14 Lukong p 47 Lukong p 48 a b c d e f Cameroon Nigeria Uppsala Conflict Data Program Archived from the original on 26 October 2019 Retrieved 26 October 2019 Lukong p 50 Lukong p 51 Government of Cameroon Civilians Uppsala Conflict Data Program Retrieved 17 November 2019 Lukong pp 51 52 Akanle amp Adesina p 346 Gibler p 435 Udeoji p 92 General Information Uppsala Conflict Data Program Archived from the original on 26 October 2019 Retrieved 26 October 2019 Lukong p 54 a b Cameroon Takes Control of Disputed Bakassi VOA News 14 August 2013 Archived from the original on 25 October 2019 Retrieved 25 October 2019 Udeoji p 93 Cameroon Nigeria Mixed Commission UNOWAS Archived from the original on 15 July 2019 Retrieved 25 October 2019 a b c Bakassi Peninsula Dispute Encyclopaedia Britannica Archived from the original on 26 October 2019 Retrieved 26 October 2019 a b Bakassi Threatens to Declare Own Republic This Day Online Archived from the original on 13 August 2009 Retrieved 18 January 2009 Cameroon Nigeria Will there be a defined border soon The Africa Report Feb 2 2021 Accessed Feb 2 2021 a b Nigeria cedes Bakassi to Cameroon BBC News 14 August 2008 Retrieved 12 January 2020 Rebels Declare Independence of Bakassi Up Station Mountain Club 31 July 2008 Archived from the original on 17 May 2019 Retrieved 26 October 2019 Troops Clash With Militants Pirates in Niger Delta Sahara Reporters Sahara Reporters 9 November 2016 Archived from the original on 6 November 2018 Retrieved 26 October 2018 70 ans chef d Etat major des armees 70 Chief of Staff of the Armed in French 27 April 2009 Archived from the original on 1 September 2019 Retrieved 26 October 2019 a b c Cameroon Rebels Threaten Security in Oil Rich Gulf of Guinea Jamestown Foundation 24 November 2010 Archived from the original on 29 August 2018 Retrieved 26 October 2019 a b c d Ngalim p 10 Nigeria Bakassi Leader Dies in Auto Accident AllAfrica 18 August 2006 Retrieved 26 October 2016 registration required Up to 21 Cameroon Troops Killed in Bakassi 13 November 2007 Retrieved 28 November 2019 Amoah p 156 a b Ngalim pp 10 11 Ngwa amp Funteh p 343 Cameroun le sort des apatrides de Bakassi reveille l instabilite de la presqu ile Cameroon The Plight of Stateless Bakassi Peninsula Creates Instability Jeune Afrique in French 24 August 2012 Archived from the original on 26 October 2019 Retrieved 26 October 2019 Ngalim p 12 a b c Institute on Statelessness and Inclusion p 3 We re Now Stateless Bakassi Indigenes Cry Out Vanguard 10 June 2017 Archived from the original on 2 October 2019 Retrieved 31 October 2019 Beckly pp 67 68 93 Ngwane p 2 Killing of 97 in Bakassi Sparks Diplomatic Row Between Cameroon Nigeria Journal du Cameroun 17 July 2017 Archived from the original on 12 August 2019 Retrieved 26 October 2019 Cameroon Nigeria Row Two Bakassi Chiefs Dethroned Journal du Cameroun 26 July 2017 Archived from the original on 16 July 2019 Retrieved 26 October 2019 Anglophone Cameroon s Separatist Conflict Gets Bloodier Reuters 1 June 2018 Retrieved 7 November 2019 Nigeria Cameroonian Gendarmes Kill Scores of Nigerians in Akwa Ibom AllAfrica 8 May 2019 Archived from the original on 8 May 2019 Retrieved 26 October 2019 Killings at Fishing Settlement Not by Camerounian Gendarmes A Ibom Govt Independent 8 May 2019 Retrieved 26 October 2019 Soldiers arrest Chief of Staff of Biafra group members Daily Post Jan 18 2021 Accessed Jan 21 2021 Renewed border tension Biafra League barricades entrance to Bakassi hoist flag National Daily 8 November 2021 Retrieved 17 November 2021 Biafra League encroaches Cameroon border hoists Biafra flag at Bakassi Peninsula entrance National Daily 21 November 2021 Retrieved 25 November 2021 Cameroonian Military Kills Biafra Nations League Commander Sahara Reporters 16 April 2022 Retrieved 16 April 2022 Casualties as Biafra group clashes with Cameroonian soldiers Daily Post 23 July 2022 Retrieved 24 July 2022 Bibliography EditAkanle Olayinka Adesina Jimi Olalekan 2017 The Development of Africa Issues Diagnoses and Prognoses Cham Switzerland Springer ISBN 978 3319 662 42 8 Akinyemi Omolara 2014 Borders in Nigeria s Relations with Cameroon Journal of Arts and Humanities Cornell University Ithaca 3 9 ISSN 2167 9053 Retrieved 17 November 2019 Amoah M 2011 Nationalism Globalization and Africa Berlin Springer ISBN 978 1137 002 16 7 Beckly Agbor Tabetah 2013 The Perceptions Views of Cameroon Nigerian Bakassi Border Conflict by the Bakassi People PDF Thesis Historiska institutionen Uppsala universitet pp 67 68 93 Retrieved 31 October 2019 Egede Edwin E Igiehon Mark Osa 2017 The Bakassi Dispute and the International Court of Justice Continuing Challenges New York Routledge ISBN 978 1317 040 74 3 Gibler Douglas M 2018 International Conflicts 1816 2010 Militarized Interstate Dispute Narratives Lanham Maryland Rowman amp Littlefield ISBN 978 1442 275 59 1 Institute on Statelessness and Inclusion 2018 Submission to the Human Rights Council at the 30th Session of the Universal Periodic Review Third Cycle May 2018 PDF Institute on Statelessness and Inclusion Retrieved 5 November 2019 a href Template Cite journal html title Template Cite journal cite journal a Cite journal requires journal help Lukong Hilary V 2011 The Cameroon Nigeria Border Dispute Management and Resolution 1981 2011 Mankon Bamenda African Books Collective pp 2 47 48 50 52 ISBN 978 9956 717 59 0 Ngalim Aloysius Nyuymengka 2016 African Boundary Conflicts and International Mediation The Absence of Inclusivity in Mediating the Bakassi Peninsula Conflict PDF Social Science Research Council 9 1 2 Retrieved 25 October 2019 Ngwa Canute Ambe Funteh Mark Bolak 2019 Crossing the Line in Africa Reconsidering and Unlimiting the Limits of Borders within a Contemporary Value Bermandan Cameroon Langaa RPCIG ISBN 978 9956 550 89 0 Ngwane George 2015 Preventing Renewed Violence Through Peace Building in the Bakassi Peninsula Cameroon PDF Jimbi Central Retrieved 26 October 2019 Udeoji Angela Ebele 2013 The Bakassi Peninsula Zone of Nigeria and Cameroon The Politics of History in Contemporary African Border Disputes PDF International Journal of Social Sciences and Humanities Reviews National Open University of Nigeria 4 2 92 93 ISSN 2276 8645 S2CID 151691502 Retrieved 25 October 2019 Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Bakassi conflict amp oldid 1117037478, 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.