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SUBSCRIBE The leading Copyright |
Query: Please provide information on the following Cameroonian
organizations: Ambazonia, Cameroon Democratic Party, Social Democratic
Front, and Anti-Gang [Brigade], such as information about the
formation, purpose, membership, composition, current status and
activities, and current relationship to the ruling party in Cameroon of
each organization. Also, please indicate if there is any information
that any of these organizations were implicated in the persecution of
others during the period of 1989-1992. Response: AMBAZONIA Ambazonia is the name of a Cameroonian organization that seeks
independence for Southern Cameroons, i.e., the Anglophone North West
[Nord-Ouest] and South West [Sud-Ouest] provinces of the Republic of
Cameroon that were known under colonial rule as British Southern
Cameroons. It is also the name used by some militant elements of the
Anglophone movement in Cameroon for a new nation that would result from
the dissolution of the 1961 union of the Southern Cameroons with the
Republic of Cameroon and the creation of a new independent state—Ambazonia (Krieger 1994, 617; Southern Cameroons Provisional
Administration 2002). According to Cameroon specialist Milton Krieger, the Cameroon
Anglophone Movement (CAM) that gathered 5,000 people at the city of
Buea in Cameroon in April 1993 for the first All-Anglophone Conference,
included moderates who sought a return to the federal structure that
had operated between 1961 and 1972, and militants who sought secession
and an independent state of Ambazonia (Krieger 1994, 616-617). The
more mainstream Social Democratic Front (SDF), led by John Fru Ndi,
distanced itself from the CAM and sought decentralization and
devolution of powers to the regions rather than independence for the
Anglophone provinces (POLITICAL HANDBOOK OF THE WORLD 1999, 159;
Krieger 1994, 616-617). The website of a group called the Southern Cameroons Provisional
Administration, which states its goal is “to gain control of the
colonized territory of the Southern Cameroons,” provides information on
the goals, objectives, strategies, and grievances of those seeking
independence for the Anglophone provinces of Cameroon (Southern
Cameroons Provisional Administration 2002). Regarding the name
Ambazonia, they note: “The word Ambazonia comes from the two words ‘Ambas’ (the coastal
peoples of Southern Cameroons) and ‘Zone’. The word was reportedly
coined by the late Professor Bernard Fonlon as an alternative
appellation to the Southern Cameroons to avoid confusion with the South
Province of La Republique du Cameroun. This appellation was later
adopted by one of the groups that has consistently demanded the
independence of the Southern Cameroons from as far back as 1985. The
Ambazonia group was initially reluctant to come under the SCPC
[Southern Cameroons Peoples Conference] (formerly AAC—[All-Anglophone
Conference]) umbrella, when the SCPC agenda still pushed for a return
to the 1961 federal structure. Ambazonia is currently under the SCPC
umbrella and strongly supports the push for Southern Cameroons
independence” (Southern Cameroons Provisional Administration 2002). According to the Southern Cameroons Provisional Administration, the
“Southern Cameroons Peoples Conference (SCPC) is the umbrella
organization for all groups fighting for Southern Cameroons
independence… The strongest of the groups within the SCPC umbrella are
CAM [Cameroon Anglophone Movement], Ambazonia, the Southern Cameroons
Youth League [SCYL], and the Free West Cameroon Movement” (Southern
Cameroons Provisional Administration 2002). In response to a question
whether the SCPC was buying weapons to engage in armed struggle for
independence for Southern Cameroons, the website states: “We have never
advocated violence” (Southern Cameroons Provisional Administration
2002). The statement acknowledges, “there are some who see Southern
Cameroons independence as ours by right and… [who] prefer that we take
up arms… and then declare our independence. Unfortunately the SCPC
does not believe this is the right approach, and fortunately for us,
the Southern Cameroonians in favor of the violent approach are in the
minority” (Southern Cameroons Provisional Administration 2002). According to the Southern Cameroons Provisional Administration, “On
December 30, 1999, the country declared its independence from La
Republique du Cameroun and is currently working to establish effective
control over its territories. The ruling authority in the country is
the British Southern Cameroons Provisional Administration, created in
Washington, DC on June 17, 2001, from a coalition of various liberation
movements including the SCNC [Southern Cameroon National Council],
SCARM [Southern Cameroons Restoration Movement] and Ambazonia”
(Southern Cameroons Provisional Administration 2002). CAMEROON DEMOCRATIC PARTY There does not appear to be a party called Cameroon Democratic
Party, though there is a Cameroonian Party of Democrats (Parti des
Democrates Camerounais, PDC), as well as more than twenty parties with
some version of “democrat” or “democracy” in their name. “The PDC is
Cameroon’s member of the Christian Democratic International [a global
network of Christian Democratic parties]. One of its leaders, Louis
Tobie Mbida, was instrumental in launching an antigovernment coalition,
the National Convention of the Cameroonian Opposition (Convention
Nationale de l’Opposition Camerounaise—CNOC), in early 1992” (POLITICAL
HANDBOOK OF THE WORLD 1999, 160). PDC leaders include Adalbert
Atangana Mbarga (President), Louis-Tobie Mbida, and Gaston Bikele Ekami
(Secretary General) (POLITICAL HANDBOOK OF THE WORLD 1999, 160). ANTI-GANG [BRIGADE] In its 2000 annual report, Amnesty International highlighted
significant human rights abuses committed by an anti-gang brigade that
appears to have been formed in 1998 to combat armed robberies in
northern Cameroon: “Extrajudicial executions of criminal suspects in North [Nord], Far-North [Extreme-Nord] and Adamawa [Adamaoua] Provinces continued during
operations to combat armed robbery by a joint unit of the army and
gendarmerie (the paramilitary police), known as the brigade anti-gang.
Since March 1998, when the unit was deployed, some 700 people were
reported to have been extrajudicially executed. In late April or early
May 1999, 15 people were reported to have been extrajudicially executed
by the brigade anti-gang on the road to Kossa, north of Maroua, Far-North [Extreme-Nord] Province, and their bodies abandoned by the
roadside. While killings were reported to have continued throughout
1999, the practice of abandoning unburied bodies decreased and it
became more difficult to establish the numbers killed. The fate of
Alioum Aminou, a photographer who had distributed photographs of
victims of extrajudicial executions, remained unknown. He had been
arrested by the brigade anti-gang in October 1998 in Maroua” (AI 2000).
“Members of a non-governmental organization, the Mouvement pour la
défense des droits de l'homme et des libertés (MDDHL), Movement for the
Defence of Human Rights and Liberties, were repeatedly threatened
because of their exposure of extrajudicial executions by the brigade
anti-gang ”(AI 2000). The UN Special Rapporteur on Torture, who visited Cameroon in May
1999, reported on the activities of the anti-gang brigade in Maroua:
“Before his mission...and when in Maroua, the Special Rapporteur
received information about a special anti-gang unit led by a Colonel
Pom which is responsible for combating the armed highway robbers who
attack, rob and kill travelers in the north of the country. The anti-gang unit is apparently arbitrarily detaining, torturing and summarily
executing people suspected of being highway robbers or of having
information about highway robbers… In certain cases, there also seem to
be a settling of personal scores and false denunciations; according to
the information, the anti-gang units show little concern for
investigations and lack of evidence. The special unit was reportedly
sent to the Nord [North] and Extrême-Nord [Far-North] provinces in
March 1998, composed of some 40 members of the army and the
gendarmerie, dressed in civilian clothing and heavily armed; it is
active in the three northernmost provinces. The unit allegedly acts
outside the law and with total impunity. Moreover, there appears to be
a climate of fear in the region, which explains the fact that relatives
of victims do not dare complain for fear of reprisals. The regional
governor and the military commander of the Extrême-Nord [Far-North]
region have reportedly stated on several occasions that they have no
authority over Colonel Pom and his men. The staff of the main NGO at
Maroua, which collects information on the unit's exactions, have
allegedly been subjected to threats and intimidation by anti-gang
personnel on several occasions…” (UN 11 Nov 1999). “According to the Secretary of State for National Defence with
responsibility for the gendarmerie, the activities of the Maroua anti-gang unit, which belongs to the so-called ‘ministerial reserve’ or the
multi-disciplinary gendarmerie intervention group (GPIG), is [sic],
although under his administrative authority, supervised directly by the
Minister of State for Defence and the President of Cameroon. This
‘ministerial reserve’, based in Yaoundé, has the role of reinforcing
the forces of law and order when public disturbances outstrip local
capacity, as is the case in the north of the country because of the
presence of the highway robbers” (UN 11 Nov 1999). A Danish Immigration Service (DIS) fact-finding mission to Cameroon,
which visited the country in early 2001, compared the anti-gang brigade
to the Commandement Operationnel (CO), “a particularly notorious police
corps”: “According to Kamga [a human rights leader], the anti-gang unit was
not identical with the CO. The anti-gang unit, which was part of the
gendarmerie, operated outside the law as did the CO, but, unlike the
CO, was a permanent unit. The CO had been established on a temporary
basis to reinforce efforts against organised and serious crime. The
anti-gang unit, which was controlled directly by the President, did not
need to record those it detained. Its head was regarded as a sort of
deputy minister who reported directly to the President. Kamga
explained that the anti-gang unit had been set up several years ago,
and that it was the head of that force who was in practice responsible
for the arrest of political prisoners. Former Minister for Public
Health Titus Edzoa was currently being held by the anti-gang unit and
thus not in a normal prison” (DIS Feb 2001). In a March 2000 statement to the United Kingdom Parliament, Peter
Hain, the Minister of State at the Foreign Office, reported: “There is widespread use of torture and detention without charge [in
Cameroon]. A special Government unit, the Brigade Anti-Gang, is
responsible for hundreds of extra-judicial killings in the north—where
there should have been another trial of 76 north-west detainees, who
have been detained without charge for two years, and of whom seven have
died in detention” (UK Parliament 14 Mar 2000). According to a recent United Kingdom Home Office report, the anti-gang unit has been responsible for a large number of extrajudicial
killings since 1998: “Credible reports by the press and the Maroua-based Movement for the
Defence of Human Rights and Liberties [MDDHL or MDHRTL], describe a
large but undetermined number of extrajudicial killings perpetrated by
a special anti-gang gendarmarie unit, known as ‘Operation Octagon’,
tasked with combating highwaymen. This unit was created under the
direct authority of the Minister of Defence and operates outside the
normal chain of command for law and order units. While some armed
suspects were killed in firefights with security forces, there were
credible reports that others caught in dragnet operations were executed
summarily. Families of the deceased and human rights NGOs have accused
the head of this unit, Colonel Pom, of extrajudicial killings of
civilians. The MDHRTL estimates that up to 1,000 persons have been
killed since the beginning of 1998” (IND Apr 2002). SOCIAL DEMOCRATIC FRONT (SDF) Reportedly, the Social Democratic Front (SDF) is “by far the largest
and most significant opposition party [to the ruling Democratic Rally
of the Cameroon People (Rassemblement Démocratique du Peuple
Camerounais, RPDC)] in Cameroon” (DIS Feb 2001). The SDF was formed in
March 1990 in the town of Bamenda in western Cameroon. John Fru Ndi,
an Anglophone bookstore proprietor who had run for parliament as a
member of President Biya’s ruling party, the Cameroon People’s
Democratic Movement (CPDM), in 1988, made the call for a new party. In
May 1990, government forces fired on a large but peaceful SDF rally and
killed six young Cameroonians. The killings generated public outrage
that led to strikes, rallies and public boycotts of the regime known as
villes morts/ghost towns (Krieger 1994, 608-610). The Biya regime accepted party pluralism in December 1990, when the
National Assembly amended the constitution to allow for a multi-party
system. Some 50 political parties were formed following this political
opening. But the opening of the political process was accompanied by
repression in response to growing public opposition to the incumbent
regime (Krieger 1994, 608-610). Legislative elections were held in March 1992, but these were
boycotted by the opposition Social Democratic Front (SDF). In
presidential elections held in October 1992, Biya was re-elected with
39.9 percent of the vote. John Fru Ndi of the SDF won 35.9 percent and
Bello Bouba Maigari of the National Union for Democracy and Progress
(UNDP) won 19.2 percent. Fru Ndi protested the results and was
arrested. In the presidential elections, Fru Ndi won 68 percent of the
votes in two populous Francophone provinces, Littoral and West [Ouest],
demonstrating support beyond his Anglophone base. He also won as much
as 39 percent of the votes in the Biya regime’s core area, Mfoundi
(Yaoundé), as opposed to Biya’s 52 percent. Fru Ndi faired poorly,
however, in the three northern Muslim provinces, which remained a
stronghold of the UNDP (Krieger 1994, 614-615). While the SDF extended its influence beyond the Anglophone North
West [Nord-Ouest] and South West [Sud-Ouest] provinces, it “remained an
Anglophone force, and was far more popular in the North West than the
South West province,” according to Milton Krieger, winning 86 percent
of votes in the former and only 52 percent in the latter province
(Krieger 1994, 612). Internal divisions in the mid- and late-1990s
also weakened the party. In May 1994, “(then) Secretary General
Assanga was dismissed by the party’s disciplinary council for making
approaches to the government on possible SDF participation in a
government of national unity” (POLITICAL HANDBOOK OF THE WORLD 1999,
159). In July 1998, “the SDF suffered its most traumatic infighting
since 1995, as 10 of the parties’ 43 legislators resigned from the
party to protest Fru Ndi’s leadership, which they reportedly
characterized as ‘authoritarian.’ Subsequently, Fru Ndi ousted
Souleimane Mahamad, theretofore SDF Vice-Chairman, in October after
Mahamad convened an extraordinary Anti-Fru Ndi forum” (POLITICAL
HANDBOOK OF THE WORLD 1999, 159). In legislative elections held in May 1997, the Cameroon People’s
Democratic Movement (CPDM) won 109 seats, the SDF 43 seats, and the
UNDP 13 seats. The opposition parties protested and called for the
elections to be annulled. Opposition leaders were detained and charged
with inciting revolt. “In late March 1997,” Amnesty International
reported, “seven weeks before the elections, violence occurred in the
English-speaking North-West [Nord-Ouest] Province, a stronghold of
opposition. This resulted in the arrest of between two and three
hundred opposition supporters, predominantly of the SDF” (AI 16 Sep
1997). The main opposition parties—the SDF, UNDP and the Democratic Union
of Cameroon (UDC)—boycotted presidential elections, held in October
1997. Biya won with 92 percent of the vote. In January 1998, a
government of national unity was formed that included the Cameroon
People’s Democratic Movement (CPDM), the UNDP and smaller parties
(POLITICAL HANDBOOK OF THE WORLD 1999, 159). SDF party members have been major targets of human rights abuses
carried out by the Biya regime. In a 1997 report on human rights in
Cameroon, Amnesty International stated: “Hundreds of critics and opponents of the government, in particular
members and supporters of opposition political parties, journalists,
human rights activists and students, have been harassed and assaulted,
arrested and imprisoned. Torture and ill-treatment by the security
forces of both political detainees and common-law prisoners is routine.
Some victims have died as a result of injuries inflicted while in
custody” (AI Sep 1997). The UN Special Rapporteur to Cameroon in his 1999 report stated that
he had received allegations “about arrest and ill-treatment of a number
of members of opposition parties during the presidential elections in
October 1992 and 1997 and the general elections of March 1992 and May
1997 which brought the Rassemblement démocratique du peuple camerounais
(RPDC) to power. Followers of the two main opposition parties in the
two English-speaking provinces of the Nord-Ouest [North-West] and Sud-Ouest [South-West] and the Extrême-Nord [Far-North] province, namely
the Social Democratic Front (SDF) and the Union nationale pour la
démocratie et le progrès (UNDP) are said to have been particularly
targeted by the mass arrests and ill-treatment” (UN 11 Nov 1999). Human rights abuses directed against the SDF and its members have
continued. The U.S. Department of State in its 2001 country report on
human rights in Cameroon highlighted human rights violations directed
against the party and its members. In April 2001, 15 SDF party members
were arrested during a demonstration and accused of participating in an
illegal march. They were later released for lack of evidence.
According to the report, “Police detained SDF leader John Fru Ndi on
several occasions to prevent him from reaching the city to join in the
marches.” In January 2001, security forces dispersed an opposition
demonstration that was protesting a new National Election Observatory
that would supervise elections. The demonstration was also attacked by
a ruling party-affiliated youth organization. John Fru Ndi and twenty
SDF supporters were detained along with leaders of other parties (USDOS
4 Mar 2002). The report also points to restrictions on the freedom of the SDF to
organize politically and use the media to broadcast their views: “CRTV television and radio programming include a weekly program,
Expression Directe, which ostensibly fulfills the Government’s legal
obligation to provide an opportunity for all political parties
represented in the National Assembly to present their views. However,
CRTV continued to restrict the opposition SDF party’s freedom of speech
through that program, occasionally censoring and significantly
shortening proposed SDF programming (USDOS 4 Mar 2002). In a telephone interview in October 2002, a Cameroon specialist at
Western Washington University stated that divisions between Francophone
and Anglophone political forces appeared to have grown deeper. He said
that among Anglophones the momentum for separatism seems to be growing
and that separatist organizations are gaining ground at the expense of
the more moderate SDF. Violations of human rights against both SDF and
SCNC members and supporters—mainly consisting of harassment—continue
(Professor of Liberal Studies 3 Oct 2002). This response was prepared after researching publicly accessible
information currently available to the RIC within time constraints.
This response is not, and does not purport to be, conclusive as to the
merit of any particular claim to refugee status or asylum. References: Amnesty International (AI). WORLD REPORT 2000. “Cameroon” (2000)
http://www.web.amnesty.org/web/ar2000web.nsf/ar2000 [Accessed 3 Oct
2002] Amnesty International (AI). CAMEROON: BLATANT DISREGARD FOR HUMAN
RIGHTS (16 Sep 1997) http://web.amnesty.org/ai.nsf/Index/AFR170161997?OpenDocument&of=COUNTRIES\CAMEROON [Accessed 3 Oct 2002] Danish Immigration Service and Refugee Board (DIS). FACT-FINDING
MISSION TO CAMEROON 23/1-3/2 2001 (Feb 2001)
http://www.udlst.dk/udlst_engelsk/sjle1/cameroon.eng.01/heledokumentet.html [Accessed 3 Oct 2002] Krieger, M. JOURNAL OF MODERN AFRICAN STUDIES. “Cameroons Democratic
Crossroads, 1990-4” (Cambridge University Press, Vol. 32, No. 4, 1994).
POLITICAL HANDBOOK OF THE WORLD 1999. “Cameroon”(Binghamton, New
York: 1999), 155-162. Professor of Liberal Studies. Western Washington University.
Telephone interview (Bellingham, Washington: 3 Oct 2002). Southern Cameroons Provisional Administration. “Frequent Questions:
Federal Republic of Southern Cameroons” (2002)
http://www.southerncameroons.org/bscpa_faqstext.htm
[Accessed 3 Oct 2002] UN Economic and Social Council (UN). REPORT OF SPECIAL RAPPORTEUR ON
TORTURE: VISIT BY THE SPECIAL RAPPORTEUR TO CAMEROON (11 Nov 1999)
http://www.unhchr.ch/Huridocda/Huridoca.nsf/0811fcbd0b9f6bd58025667300306dea/3473ae9240df264b8025688e0053378a?OpenDocument#IC [Accessed 3 Oct
2002] United Kingdom, Home Office. Immigration and Nationality Directorate
(IND). CAMEROON ASSESSMENT (Apr 2002)
http://www.ind.homeoffice.gov.uk/default.asp?pageid=167 [Accessed 8
Oct 2002] United Kingdom Parliament (UK). (14 Mar 2000)
http://www.parliament.the-stationery-office.co.uk/pa/cm199900/cmhansrd/vo000314/debtext/00314-05.htm
[Accessed 3 Oct 2002] U.S. Department of State (USDOS). COUNTRY REPORTS ON HUMAN RIGHTS
PRACTICES FOR 2001. “Cameroon” (4 Mar 2002)
http://www.state.gov/g/drl/rls/hrrpt/2001/af/8285.htm [Accessed 3 Oct
2002] |