A nation divided: tensions
mount in Cameroon as English speakers marginalised by Francophone
majority
Cameroon's capital city Yaoundé |
18 March
2017 • 3:25pm
To be
born an English speaker in a world where the language remains the lingua franca
of trade and diplomacy is normally to draw first prize in the linguistic
lottery of life.
But in
one corner of Africa, having English as a mother tongue has proved a curse
thanks to a colonial anomaly that left a seething Anglophone underclass in a
slither of overwhelmingly French-speaking Cameroon.
For the
past four months, the two English-speaking regions of
western Cameroon have risen up against a perceived decades-long
assault by the Francophone elite on their language and British traditions,
staging a campaign of general strikes, demonstrations and the occasional
riot.
A
ruthless response by the government, characterised by the killing of protesters
and a two-month internet shutdown in English-speaking regions, has hardened
antagonisms, pitching the West African country into deep crisis and raising
questions about its survival as a unified state.
Amid
growing secessionists mutterings, Britain has become more active in recent days
in attempting to defuse the confrontation. Last week Brian Olley, the British
High Commissioner to Cameroon, met Paul Biya, the country’s 84-year-old
president, and is understood to have called on him to end the use of force
against protesters.
“We have
raised our concerns with the government of Cameroon and will continue to raise these
issues, including allowing access to the internet,” a Foreign Office
spokeswoman said.
Protests
in Cameroon in December 2016
|
But such
quiet diplomacy has also angered some Anglophone activists, who accuse Britain
of abandoning its responsibilities in the former British Southern Cameroons,
which united with the much larger French Cameroons in 1961.
“Britain
made us what we are and now most people in Britain don’t even know we exist,”
an activist involved in the demonstrations said.
Despite
the anger, Anglophone Cameroonians, who make up less than a fifth of the
county’s 23m people, remain stubbornly loyal to their colonial traditions. To
the bewilderment and often the derision of French speakers, they insist on
forming orderly queues, referring to bars as “off-licences” and dressing up
their judges and lawyers in powdered wigs.
Both
British common law and the GCE O-and-A-level syllabus remain deeply cherished.
It is a
loyalty that has rarely been reciprocated by Britain.
Daniel Mekobe Sone; Cameroon's head of the Supreme Court |
The
British Cameroons were made famous by the writings of naturalist Gerald
Durrell, who visited in the Forties to search for the elusive hairy toad. He
was memorably assisted by an uproarious Anglophone king, the Fon of Bafut, a
gin-and-bitters-swilling pidgin speaker with a large retinue of drum-playing,
bosom-jiggling wives whom Durrell taught the Conga.
But
Britain generally wanted little to do with the place. William Gladstone turned
down a plea for annexation from local kings in 1884, allowing Bismark to take
it for Germany.
After the
First World War, Britain turned over five-sixths of the territory to France,
agreeing to an arbitrary border line drawn up by Francois Georges-Picot, the
French diplomat jointly responsible for the Middle East’s controversial modern
boundaries.
Heartbroken
local kings, like the Sultan of Bamum, protested in vain.
“I wish
to follow the King of England and to be his servant, together with my country,
so that we may be freshened with dew,” the sultan wrote in a letter to George V
“who puts the evil men to flight and the troublesome to prison.”
After
independence in 1960, the British Cameroons were wooed into union with the much
larger French Cameroons by a promise that they would be equal members of a
federal, bilingual state — a pledge broken when the federal constitution was
abandoned in 1972.
Since
then, English speakers say they have been shut out of jobs, denied fair
political representation and deprived of revenues from oil, much of which is
extracted from former British territory.
A woman in northern Cameroon Credit: AFP/Getty Images |
Matters came
to a head in November when a group of lawyers staged a small protest
outside the courthouse in Bamenda, Cameroon’s largest Anglophone city, to
demand the withdrawal of judges who spoke no English and had no understanding
of British common law. The protest was broken up with tear gas.
The
authorities must have assumed that, as in the past, the protests would peter
out. Instead, the movement grew, drawing in Anglophone teachers, angered by
state attempts to replace them with French speakers with knowledge of neither
English nor the GCE syllabus.
Students
joined in too, only to see their halls of residence raided and female students
beaten and sexually abused by the police, according to activists.
The
government admits to six protester deaths, though activists say the true toll
is much higher.
With
force alone appearing to fail, Mr Biya has since January attempted to seal off
Anglophone Cameroon from the outside world by cutting off internet
access to the two regions.
An
absolutist gerontocrat who has clung to power through a series of controversial
elections, there are signs that even French-speakers are finally losing
patience with a leader who spends so much time in Europe his people view him as
an absentee landlord.
Last
October a Cameroonian stood outside the Intercontinental Hotel in
Geneva, where the president is said to have spent most of the Summer, and
hurled insults at Mr Biya through a loud-hailer.
Cameroon's President Paul Biya Credit: AFP/Getty Images |
Since
then the president has shown signs of increasing paranoia. He was mocked by
even French speakers after the present Miss Cameroon was stripped of
her crown in January, allegedly for calling on the government to listen to
Anglophone concerns.
So far,
however, there is little sign that Mr Biya will relent. Most of the leaders of
the protest movement have been arrested in recent weeks and charged with
“terrorism, hostility against the fatherland, secession, revolution, contempt
of the president… group rebellion, civil war and dissemination of fake news.”
Facing
the death penalty, their trial before a military tribunal has
shown Cameroon’s problems in microcosm. Bewigged defence lawyers, seated
across the room from bare-headed Francophone prosecutors, struggled to follow
proceedings conducted in French. When an interpreter was eventually provided
the translation was so poor that few were any the wiser.
It is a
sign, Anglophone Cameroonians say, that they will never be understood
or accepted by the French speaking majority.
“The
Anglophones are a people,” Henry Ngale Monono, a barrister, wrote recently in
a Cameroonian newsletter. “We have a common culture, a common
language. The Francophones want is to think like them behave like them, act
like them — which is not possible.”
Written By
Source
http://www.telegraph.co.uk/news/2017/03/18/nation-divided-tensions-mount-cameroon-english-speakers-marginalisedby/
The government of Cameroon has look for a long lasting solution to this problem
ReplyDelete