Abstract
The deep roots of current Anglophone secessionist claims can be found in what is called the “Anglophone problem.” Anglophone Cameroonians feel that reunification with Francophone Cameroon in 1961 has marginalized the Anglophone minority—endangering Anglophone cultural heritage and identity—in a post-colonial nation-state controlled by a Francophone political elite. Anglophone resistance has been a permanent feature of Cameroon’s post-colonial biography. Yet only in the early 1990s did Anglophone elites mobilize the regional population, claiming self-determination, autonomy, and later outright secession. The prospects for secession appear bleak, owing to heavy-handed state repression, internal divisions within the main secessionist organization, an international and regional political architecture with a default commitment to state sovereignty and territorial integrity, and diverging views among Anglophone Cameroonians on the appropriate way forward.
Keywords
- Secessionist Claims
- Anglophone Cameroon
- Francophone Cameroon
- Anglophone Elite
- Southern Cameroon National Council (SCNC)
These keywords were added by machine and not by the authors. This process is experimental and the keywords may be updated as the learning algorithm improves.
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- 1.
Konings and Nyamnjoh (2003).
- 2.
- 3.
Gwaibi (2016).
- 4.
See, for example, http://www.iuaes.org/statement/letter_on_%20Cameroon.pdf, and http://www.rfi.fr/emission/20170219-comprendre-question-anglophone-cameroun (last accessed April 15, 2017).
- 5.
Cameroon Anglophone Civil Society Consortium, https://www.ca-csc.org (last accessed April 14, 2017).
- 6.
- 7.
- 8.
Konings (2005a).
- 9.
Awasom (1998).
- 10.
Amazee (1990).
- 11.
Ngoh (2001).
- 12.
- 13.
- 14.
Kofele-Kale (1980).
- 15.
Awasom (2000).
- 16.
- 17.
- 18.
- 19.
Percival (2008).
- 20.
The British had informed the United Nations that the Southern Cameroons would not be economically viable as an independent state. This was based on the Phillipson Report (1959) commissioned by the Foncha government in 1959.
- 21.
Ngoh (1990: 179–80).
- 22.
Joseph (1977).
- 23.
- 24.
Konings and Nyamnjoh (2003).
- 25.
- 26.
Messmer (1998: 134–35).
- 27.
Anyangwe (2009).
- 28.
All Anglophone Conference (1993: 12).
- 29.
- 30.
Stark (1976).
- 31.
Benjamin (1972).
- 32.
Eyoh (1998).
- 33.
- 34.
Bayart (1989).
- 35.
- 36.
Konings (2001).
- 37.
Takougang and Krieger (1998).
- 38.
Konings and Nyamnjoh (2003).
- 39.
- 40.
Reference to the incumbent regime as the government of La République du Cameroun, the name adopted by Francophone Cameroon at independence, has become a key signifier in the replotting of the nation’s constitutional history as a progressive consolidation of the recolonization of Anglophone Cameroon by the post-colonial Francophone-dominated state. See Eyoh (1998: 264).
- 41.
Anyangwe (2008).
- 42.
“The New Social Order” by Fon Gorji Dinka, March 20, 1985, reproduced in Mukong (1990: 98–99).
- 43.
The name is derived from Ambas Bay at the foot of Mount Cameroon, which was the area of permanent British settlement in the present-day Anglophone region. In 1858, the British Baptist missionary, Alfred Saker, purchased land from the King of Bimbia and became the de facto governor of the small colony of Victoria that was named after the British Queen. See Ardener (1968).
- 44.
Krieger (2008).
- 45.
Nyamnjoh (2005).
- 46.
Konings (2002).
- 47.
Konings and Nyamnjoh (2003: 77–78).
- 48.
Mbu (1993).
- 49.
Konings (2004).
- 50.
Konings and Nyamnjoh (2003: 142–48).
- 51.
All Anglophone Conference (1993: 8).
- 52.
Konings (1999).
- 53.
All Anglophone Conference (1994).
- 54.
See SCNC press release reprinted in Cameroon Post, August 16–23, 1994: 3. See also Anyangwe (2008).
- 55.
Cameroon Post, October 8–14, 1996 and The Witness, November 12–18, 1996.
- 56.
- 57.
See SCNC, “Petition against the Annexation of the Southern Cameroons.” Buea, May 1995 (mimeo).
- 58.
SCNC, “The London Communiqué.” London, June 22, 1995 (mimeo).
- 59.
See “Annan Ends African Tour, Seeks Cameroon Dialogue” on scncforum website, May 4, 2000.
- 60.
- 61.
- 62.
Konings and Nyamnjoh (2003: 96–99).
- 63.
- 64.
Kinni (2013).
- 65.
Jua and Konings (2004: 624).
- 66.
Jua and Konings (2004: 624–25).
- 67.
Dicklitch (2010).
- 68.
Ebai (2009).
- 69.
Konings and Nyamnjoh (2003: 99–101).
- 70.
See Star Headlines, 19 March 2006, “The British Government Condemns Anglophone Secession.”
- 71.
Jua and Konings (2004).
- 72.
Konings (2005b: 176).
- 73.
The Post, November 13, 2000: 3.
- 74.
SCARM was the successor of the Cameroon Anglophone Movement (CAM), which was originally the most important Anglophone movement.
- 75.
See “British Southern Cameroons Summit, Resolutions.” Washington, June 17, 2001 (mimeo); and “Washington Proclamation of the Statehood of Ex-British Southern Cameroons.” Washington, June 17, 2001 (mimeo).
- 76.
Nfor (2016).
- 77.
See http://bamendaonline.net/blog/hon-ayah-speaks-out-after-supreme-court-appointment/ (last accessed April 2015).
- 78.
See http://www.cameroonvoice.com/news/article-news-18398.html (last accessed April 15, 2017).
- 79.
Nfor (2016).
- 80.
January 2017.
- 81.
See https://www.facebook.com/scncsoutherncameroonsnationalcouncil/posts/592013517662909 (last accessed April 2015).
- 82.
- 83.
Nyamnjoh and Rowlands (1998).
- 84.
- 85.
- 86.
Awoh and Nkwi (2015).
- 87.
- 88.
See Cameroon Concord, http://cameroon-concord.com/headlines/item/7265-cameroon-lawyers-protest-police-injure-dozens-raid-law-offices-american-diplomat-steps-in (last accessed April 14, 2017).
- 89.
See https://www.ca-csc.org (last accessed April 2017).
- 90.
Owono (2010).
- 91.
Owono 2010).
- 92.
- 93.
Konings (1999).
- 94.
See Bernard Fonlon, http://www.alafnet.com/cameroon-a-secret-memo-by-bernard-fonlon-to-ahmadou-ahidjo/ (last accessed April 2017).
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Konings, P., Nyamnjoh, F.B. (2019). Anglophone Secessionist Movements in Cameroon. In: de Vries, L., Englebert, P., Schomerus, M. (eds) Secessionism in African Politics. Palgrave Series in African Borderlands Studies. Palgrave Macmillan, Cham. https://doi.org/10.1007/978-3-319-90206-7_3
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