Agbor Balla Wins Mandela Award for Courage, Vision &
Leadership
Agbor Balla celebrates his Mandela Award with some staffers of the Nkafu Policy Institute |
Buea-based Human Rights crusader, Barrister Nkongho Felix
Agbor-Anyor aka Agbor Balla, was on Tuesday 17 July 2018, in Yaounde,
proclaimed the 2018 winner of the Nelson Mandela Memorial Award, offered by the
Nkafu Policy Institute.
Balla
was elected for the prestigious award in preference to other formidable
nominees including Justice Ayah Paul Abine (Retired Supreme Court Advocate
General and drum-major for Justice), Bishop Andrew Nkea of the Mamfe Diocese,
Prof. Emmanuel Pondi (Vice Rector of Uni-Yao II), Arch-Bishop Joseph Kleda of
Douala, Mrs Fidel Djebba (Founder of Rayons du Soleil), Achaleke Christian Leke
(Civil society and peace advocate) and Paul Eric Kinge (Politician and Social
Activist).
“The
Nelson Mandela Award is a non political and non partisan award that recognizes
a Cameroonian who incarnates the values that President Nelson Mandela stood
for. It recognizes courageous, visionary and collaborative leadership across
all tiers in Cameroon. The Award is offered to a political leader, an activist,
religious authority, or any individual who epitomizes or fits into the ideas
and practices of Nelson Mandela’s life and legacy. It recognizes an individual
who has successfully tackled vital issues of public policy, overcome
significant adversity or achieved real change for the public good.
Commentators
said it was no surprise that Agbor Balla emerged the 2018 winner of the coveted
Award, given his committed, steadfast, unwavering, non-violent and
collaborative leadership in the ongoing Anglophone struggle.
Renowned
Man of Letters, social critic and play-write, Achingale Douglas, described
Agbor Balla as not only a “fearless
freedom fighter and frontline human rights activist but the most influential
Human Rights Crusader in Cameroon for 2018.”
“This is
only a stepping stone for the great achiever and mammoth personality that is
Agbor Balla,” further remarked Douglas Achingale.
To
historian, teacher and prolific essayist, Besong Joseph, the Mandela award is
just another red-feather on Balla’s already crowded cap. “The best is yet to
come for Agbor Balla,” Besong predicted.
“This is
just the prelude; greater things are in the pipeline for this 21st century
human rights fighter,” noted Hanson Sone, who also reacted on facebook.
Sone
described Agbor Balla as “the Nelson Mandela of our time”.
A former
consultant with the United Nations Systems, Agbor Balla is the founder and lead
counsel of the Buea-based Agbor Nkongho law firm. He is also founder of the
Buea-based Centre for Human Rights and Democracy in Africa, CHRDA.
Balla is
reputed to have demonstrated an unprecedented leadership, advocacy and
communication skill since the unset of the Anglophone crisis in 2016.
He was
the founding president of the Consortium of Anglophone Civil Society
Organizations (Consortium for short), which advocated civil disobedience and
non-violence in the pursuit of justice, equality and freedom by Anglophones in
Cameroon.
Because
of his rather unwavering and determined stance on the Anglophone question,
Balla and the scribe of the Consortium, Dr. Fontem Neba, were tagged as
terrorists by the Yaounde regime, abducted in Buea and whisked off to Yaounde
and dumped in the Kondengui Maximum security prison, where they spent 8 months.
Ever
since he regained his freedom, Balla has continued fighting for justice and
calling for dialogue and negotiations as a means towards seeking a lasting
solution to the crisis in the North West and South West regions.
In his
acceptance speech while receiving the award, Balla called for an end to armed
violence in Southern Cameroons. He dedicated the award to the suffering masses
of Southern Cameroonians, who were brutalized by soldiers as they marched with
peace plants to protest against long years of marginalization by successive
Yaounde regimes. See full text of Balla’s acceptance speech below.
The
Nelson Mandela Memorial Award was organized as part of activities to mark the
2018 Mandela Day.
Agbor Balla’s Acceptance Speech After Winning Nelson Mandela Memorial Award
Your Excellencies,
Distinguished Guests,
Ladies and Gentlemen,
It is a source of great pride to be present at this event
and to receive the Nelson Mandela Memorial Award from Nkafu Policy Institute.
We are deeply honoured to receive an award which incarnates the values that
President Nelson Mandela stood for.
We
accept this award at a moment when 8 million Southern Cameroonians are engaged
in a struggle to end the long years of marginalisation, oppression, human
rights abuses and assimilation. We accept this award on behalf of a movement to
establish freedoms, rule of law, good governance and recognition of a people
with a unique culture, history and system within the diversity of a bicultural,
bilingual and bijural nation.
I am
mindful that only yesterday civil disobedience swept over South West and North
West, and as of yesterday we have 50,000 Southern Cameroonian refugees in
Nigeria, 200,000 internally displaced people living in the rainforests of Meme,
Ndian, Momo and other divisions, we have 1500 Southern Cameroonians in maximum
security prisons in Yaounde, Buea, Bamenda and Douala. I am mindful that 78 villages have been burnt down, over 50
schools burnt down, dozens of administrative buildings burnt or destroyed, more
than 3000 civilians have died, over 150 soldiers have been killed, several
chiefs and civilians kidnapped and daily fighting between armed groups and
government soldiers.
Therefore,
I must ask myself why this prize is awarded to a movement of people who were
called terrorists, to a struggle that has not won the freedoms, justice and
recognition it is fighting for.
After much
reflection, I conclude that this award I receive on behalf of the Southern
Cameroons struggle is a sincere recognition that nonviolent resistance is the
answer to fight against marginalisation, violence and oppression. I reject the
notion that a nation must spiral down towards yearlong armed conflict with
human and material casualties before leaders sit down to talk to each other.
Accepting
this award is accepting a pledge to continue till we overcome and in the words
of Mandela, “We pledge ourselves to liberate all our people from the continuing
bondage of poverty, deprivation, suffering, gender and other discrimination.”
I will
like to dedicate this award to the people of Southern Cameroons, the girls and
women living in refugee camps, shelters and forests, children prevented from
pursuing education, the unjustly detained, hundreds in exile hiding from
persecution and the amazing lawyers who have dedicated their legal services in
defending the rights of those affected.
While we
continue resisting oppression, fighting against marginalisation, assimilation
and bad governance, the answer doesn’t reside in kidnapping chiefs, civilians
or people we disagree with.
The
solution is not tribalism or ethnic division. Attacking Anglophone Bamilekes,
Bassas, Ewondos or Francophones, goes against the very model of freedoms which
we seek. We must end hate speech against North westerners or South westerners
for we are one people. To our Francophone brothers, the Southern Cameroons
struggle has never been Anglophones versus Francophones, rather it is Southern
Cameroonians against the current system of government and institutions which
have provided little opportunities for the Anglophones while eroding our
culture, system, language and rights. You are not our enemy, you are our ally.
1
Corinthians 16:14 tells us, “Let all that you do be done in love.” Like the
grandmother who gave me 2000 FCFA in court while I was facing trial for
terrorism at the Yaounde Military Court. Following the example of the young boy
who met me in a restaurant, took my phone number and surprisingly sent me 2000
FCFA airtime. That is love without boundaries and if we love each other hate
will have no place in our society.
I
congratulate my fellow nominees for the work you have done to impact our
society and your sense of leadership. May we continue working together for the
journey ahead is still long and we will need each other during our various
obstacles and successes.
I will
like to thank the Fako Lawyers Association for their sacrifices, all Common Law
Lawyers for the dedication to defend justice, all Cameroonians from both sides
of Mungo including the diaspora who supported the movement and fight against
marginalisation and oppression, we recognize your sacrifices and support as we
ask you to continue for us to arrive the finish line. To all organisations,
supporters and citizens of the world who continue advocating for us, we are
very grateful for your voices. Thank you, to my family, friends and to the
brilliant staff of Centre for Human Rights and Democracy in Africa, you
sacrificed your time, families and lives to advance the work we have done so
far. To all with views different from ours, we hear you and we hope to work
together on issues of common interest to advance democracy and peaceful
coexistence.
The
Centre for Human Rights and Democracy in Africa has provided a clear view of
the human rights, socio political and economic implications of the Anglophone
crisis during consultations and recommendations to our local, regional and international
partners, diplomats, world superpowers and belligerents of the crisis. It is in
our best interest to see a quick end to the conflict through meaningful
negotiations and for this to happen we need a ceasefire and measures in place
for confidence building on both sides. As Mandela said, “Negotiation and
discussion are the greatest weapons we have for promoting peace and
development.” I think Madiba will know what I mean when I say that in the
spirit of humanity, justice and peace, I accept this award. In the spirit of
peace emulated by our people who protested with peace plants despite
confrontations with armed soldiers, I humbly accept this award. I believe that
we shall overcome.
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