Friday, February fourteenth, the UN says at least 22 people have been killed in a village in the Northwest region of Cameroon. Over half of those killed were children. No one has claimed responsibility for Friday’s incident but the opposition parties blame the killing on the government.
Cameroon government facing growing unrest
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Global Research, April 04, 2017
Younger
educators who have begun their work within the last seven years are claiming
they have never received a paycheck.
A
special meeting convened by top governmental officials during late March agreed
to establish a task force to address the issue. However, educators will not be
satisfied until they are paid in full for their services.
The
meeting of government officials and representatives of the teachers union
released what was said to be a joint communique on March 29. The cabinet
ministers present agreed to move as quickly as possible in resolving the
problems.
According
to the statement released at the conclusion of the talks, the prime minister’s
office said:
“After frank and fruitful discussions which helped to explore
the current situation, the participants agreed on the following points: (1).
the rapid and integral financial absorption of all teachers concerned as from
the month of April 2017; (2) the setting up of a consultative platform bringing
together representatives of Government departments involved in the processing
of teachers’ absorption files and those of the”Collectif des Enseignants
Indignés du Cameroun” to: (i) accurately determine the number of teachers
effectively concerned; (ii) propose lasting solutions to the late processing of
files observed; (ii) prepare a plan for the settlement of arrears owed the
teachers concerned; and (iv) define ways of rapidly taking charge of allowances
and other bonuses.”
These
labor problems which began in the two former British colonial provinces of the
country have now spread to the eight French-speaking areas. A march and rally
in the capital of Yaounde on March 28 outside the Ministry of Finance involved
hundreds of primary and secondary teachers many of whom were carrying placards
saying “no pay, no work.”
Just
the day before on March 27, teachers refused to end their strike at the
urging of the government. The Ministry of Secondary Education human resources
director Moussa Djafarou told the media that some 11,000 authenticated
personnel files from the educators had been compiled and forwarded to the
Ministry of Finance for processing.
Reports
indicate that up to 20,000 teachers are impacted by the non-payment of salaries
out of a total of approximately 80,000 educators. Those affected appear to be
people who have graduated over the last several years and entered the
profession.
The
protesting teachers attribute administrative disarray for their plight. They
say that repeatedly the Ministries of Education and Finance have failed to
carry out its duties.
Rogers
Kiven,
a 27-year-old educator, traveled to Yaounde from Mokollo located on the border
with Nigeria. Kiven was quoted in a Voice of America report saying he had not
received one pay check since starting his career four years ago.
The
young teacher emphasized that:
“We discovered that two years, three years, four years after
that we still have not [received] a franc. We communicated [with] our minister
and he communicated with his colleague from finance. From those communications,
we were able to deduce that our moneys were with the minister of finance.
Inasmuch as we are not paid, we are not going to leave this place.” (VOA, March
28)
Another
teacher, 30-year-old Zudom Calvin, noted that this was not the first
time governmental officials had promised to pay the arrears of their
salaries. Calvin said:
“They ask us to compile documents and even when we compile those
documents, sometimes they get lost. So we do not want that system to go on like
that. He [the finance minister] must pay us.” (VOA)
Colonial
Origins of the Unresolved National Question in Cameroon
The
plight of teachers across Cameroon first surfaced within the context of the
problems in the areas that were previously dominated by British imperialism.
Since independence in 1960 the divisions fostered by the partitioning of the
country between France and England in 1919 has never been fully resolved.
Although officially Cameroon is not a so-called “francophone state” those
residing in the former British colonial regions of the northwest and southwest
assert that their rights are routinely violated in the legal and educational
sectors.
For
six months unrest has spread in the English-speaking areas. Lawyers went on
strike complaining about the imposition of French-speaking administrative
judges in their courtrooms making their work almost impossible. This discontent
spread into the school system triggering a strike among educators in the latter
months of 2016.
All
of modern-day Cameroon and other neighboring territories including areas within
Togo were initially colonized by Germany on July 5, 1884 even prior to the
Berlin West Africa Conference of 1884-85 where the imperialist states divided
the continent based upon their own economic and political interests. The German
colonial authorities instituted a system of forced labor used to build the
railroads throughout the country.
Germany
maintained colonies in Southwest Africa, East Africa in Tanganyika and in West
Africa where tens of thousands of Africans were subjected to genocidal policies
of slave labor, systematic beatings and starvation. These brutal acts also
resulted in widespread deaths in Cameroon and Togo.
One
description of the character of German colonial repression says:
“Jesko von Puttkamer, one of the governors of the colony,
was most responsible for this brutality in Cameroon. He described the Duala
people of Cameroon as ‘the most lazy, false, and base rabble the sun ever shone
upon, and it would certainly have been better if, during the conquest of the
land in 1884, they had at least been kicked out of the country if not
exterminated.’ Under his governorship (1895–1906) the natives were also
severely flogged, property was confiscated, villages were burned, natives were
murdered, chiefs were imprisoned, and labor was forced and unpaid. These were
some of the complaints of the native chiefs against Puttkamer. The German
government, however, found such charges unworthy of investigation. It was only
due to the efforts of a coalition of missionaries and large companies that
Puttkamer was replaced as acting Governor.” (Article by Bill Johnson published
at www.creation.com/African-holocaust, Nov. 28, 2013)
During
World War I, the British invaded German colonial Kamerun taking control of the
territory. Germany’s defeat in the first imperialist war ended its colonial
project in Africa rendering the people of Togo and Cameron to British and
French domination.
Independence
Struggle and the Triumph of Neo-Colonialism
In
December 1956, the Union of the Peoples of Cameroon (UPC), a revolutionary
anti-imperialist national liberation movement launched an armed struggle
against France to gain independence. The UPC called for the unification of
French and British dominated regions of the country. The French colonial
authorities suppressed the liberation movement resulting in the deaths of tens
of thousands of Africans.
Later
Ruben Um Nyobé, the Secretary-General of the UPC was killed in combat on
September 13, 1958. Felix Moumié, UPC president, was poisoned in Geneva,
Switzerland in October 1960 at the aegis of the French secret service.

Cameroon’s
first post-colonial President Ahmadou Ahidjo collaborated with the
French imperialists against the UPC and won the favor of imperialism. Ahidjo
ruled the country from the time of independence in January 1960 until 1982 when
he voluntarily relinquished office. His prime minister, Paul Biya, took
control and soon clashed with Ahidjo supporters. The former president went into
exile in 1983 and never returned to the country. The Biya government implicated
him in a failed attempted military coup in April 1984.
The
divisions between the former English and French dominated areas of the country
were officially resolved at the time of independence in July 1961 at the
Foumban Conference. Ahidjo became the first president of French Cameroon and
subsequent referendums divided the state between Nigeria and Cameroon. Northern
Muslim-dominated areas were federated with Nigeria, a former British colony.
The western areas controlled by Britain were incorporated into the modern-day
state of Cameroon.
Biya
has remained in office for thirty five years. There have been numerous elections
since the 1980s where Biya succeeded in maintaining control through his
Cameroon People’s Democratic Movement (CPDM) ruling party. The party has a
majority in the legislative branch of government.
The
country has also been subjected to threats from the Boko Haram Islamic group
based in neighboring Nigeria. In a recent video the Boko Haram leader
threatened to assassinate Biya.
These
developments in Cameroon will undoubtedly test the strength and viability of
the state amid calls from some leaders of the English-speaking regions to
secede from Yaounde. Nonetheless, the further balkanization of Africa, a
product of imperialist rule from the 19th century, cannot provide a solution to
the unresolved nationality and language questions.
The
original source of this article is Global Research
Copyright
© Abayomi Azikiwe, Global Research, 2017Popular posts from this blog
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