Macron’s Bashing Gives Regime Barons Sleepless Nights
Ever since French President, Emmanuel Macron, expressed his
frustration with the Yaounde government’s inability to address the issues that
have triggered the fighting in the country’s English-speaking minority, the
relationship between the two countries seems to be falling apart. The Ngarbuh
Massacre seems to be the tipping point. The French have repeatedly called on
the Yaounde government to explore other options, but the decades-old regime
seems to be stuck in the past.
Regime Barons have not gone to sleep ever since Macron’s outing |
The
government has been in dire straits for a long time, but Macrons public
statements have clearly sent the beleaguered regime into a tailspin. The
Yaounde government never expected the French to throw it under the bus. Itnow
appears completely taken aback.
No man
will continue to support a bad child until his death. If a child chooses to be
ineffective, he must be cut out at one point and this is what appears to be
playing out between France and its struggling former colony – Cameroon.
France
has stood behind the Yaounde government, though dismissed as corrupt and
ineffective, ever since the fighting in Cameroon started. The government’s
insistence on using violent military action to wrap up the insurgency and its
establishment of tribe-based militia to kill thousands of people in the two
English-speaking regions have turned out to be the wedge that will separate it
from its French masters who now believe that at 87, Paul Biya clearly belongs
to a different and distant epoch.
It takes
a lot of courage and determination to speak the truth in public. The French are
noted for their diplomatic double-speak and nobody could imagine that Emmanuel
Macron would speak about Biya in such despicable and demeaning language. The
cat is out of the bag. The Yaounde government has not only been receiving money
from Paris, it has also been receiving firm instructions from the Elysee Palace
on how to run the country.
Macron’s
statement has really angered and weakened the Yaounde government. The hastily
organized protests in front of the French Embassy in Yaounde and in other parts
of Cameroon are clear testimonies to the desperation into which Mr. Macron has
dumped the Yaounde government.
Generally,
in Cameroon, demonstrations are not tolerated. But since Monday’s
demonstrations were organized by regime surrogates, there was no tear gas and
no riot police to beat, maim and kill peaceful protesters. The Yaounde regime
has simply evolved from a struggling democracy into a full-blown dictatorship
that has no regard for human rights and human life.
The
disappointment of the Yaounde government is so glaring that even government
soldiers could be seen trampling on the French flag right in front of the
French Embassy. This has touched some raw nerves in Paris and many French
officials are already talking of sanctions against the Yaounde government that
has reluctantly been talking of its sovereignty. Indeed, there is no love lost
between France and Cameroon.
This
faux-pas made by the Yaounde regime will certainly cost it a ton of money and
its reputation. Its leading donor and backer, France, is angry and there will
be consequences for Yaounde’s refusal to obey instructions from the Elysee on
how to deal with the Southern Cameroons crisis.
The
government is aware of this and government ministers have been working overtime
to see if things could be repaired before they get out of hand. Cabinet
ministers in Yaounde have been calling their contacts in France to see if they
can help repair the damaged relationship.
A
source at the Unity Palace in Yaounde said that the Presidency has been
transformed into a call center, with government officials working the phones
all day long in a bid to find a genuine solution to the situation that has left
cracks on the Franco-Cameroon wall of unity.
But the
French are not buying into whatever excuses President Biya’s ministers are
giving. Paris wants a sustainable solution to the Southern Cameroons crisis
that has torn the country apart. It also wants the country’s authorities to
find a solution to the socio-political crisis that was triggered by the fake
presidential elections in 2018 which gave Mr. Biya another 7-year term.
Paris
needs genuine solutions and not cosmetic arrangements which have become the
hallmark of the beleaguered Yaounde regime.
The
French president is sick and tired of being embarrassed everywhere he goes. He
is being accused of aiding and abetting the recalcitrant regime in Yaounde and
this is not reflecting well on him, especially as a leader whose democracy is
predicated upon democracy and human rights.
The
French will be going to the polls sometime next year and the French president
wants to go into the polls knowing that he has no blemishes on him. Cameroon’s
multiple problems have become another Coronavirus and Mr. Macron wants to
distance himself from this virus that might mar his re-election next year.
For the
moment, the French are focused on finding a more viable option to Mr. Biya. He
has fallen short of the international community’s expectation and he must be
made to leave the political scene which should be full of young energetic
Cameroonians who can engineer real and long-term solutions to the issues facing
the country.
The
world does not need leaders who are driven by their egos. The world needs
leaders who can display a lot of flexibility when faced with tough challenges.
While Mr. Biya may be the head of the corrupt regime, the crowd around him must
be axed too as those are some of the people who are spreading extremism and
ordering the killing of other young Cameroonians just because they want to
perpetuate themselves in the corridor of power.
The
cleanup will be challenging, but it must be done if Cameroon, Central Africa’s
engine of growth and stability, must know long-lasting peace. The journey ahead
is long, but everything is doable. With Kamto eroding the government’s
credibility abroad and Southern Cameroonians sapping the economy of its
vitality, it is clear that before long, the Biya regime will be on its knees
just like its wobbly economy.
Cameroonians
must continue to pile the pressure on the crumbling government. With the French
walking away from the establishment, it is obvious that Mr. Biya and his people
will soon be in the disgraceful past.
Dear publisher I happened to stumble on your blog by luck, while very impress with the hard work of your accomplishments, I greatly differ with you on a majority of issues highlighted within your article.
ReplyDeletePoint one Cameroonians should learn from the present chaos in US domestic politics, foreign interference has never been good in domestic politics, hence should be something every Cameroonian should runaway from. By giving reason for Kamto's trip out of Cameroon you are enabling the very evil grail (angel of doom) that every Cameroonian weep and pray the day the sins of their ancestors would have been paid in full.
Cameroonians should be very skeptical for any politician seeking foreign interference. I cannot emphasize enough on the destruction this very act has left many nations in ruins, Cameroon your home being a living example.
I for one having to work in Cameroon for 2yrs during my brief stop in Cameroon precisely Limbe, was fascinated by the fact that, CDC a company in the southwest province has never been managed by a francophone but yet it has been so poorly managed after this institution was handed over to Cameroonians. This should give you a bearing of what Cameroon needs, individuals with a sense of good governance and ethics.
Lastly, while out there let people know why individuals with a sense of good governance and ethics is the only way out not people who seek to garner help from foreigners for these politicians will always be slave to their masters… and the loop will never be broken………..