First published at bamendaonline.net
The Anglophone crisis in Cameroon is
growing deadlier. The Church could mediate between Anglophone
militants and the state, but clergy have espoused clashing views on key
issues. The Church should heal its divides so as to be a neutral arbiter
that can broker peace.
What’s new? Fighting is spreading
between security forces and militants from Cameroon’s English-speaking
minority. The government largely rejects Anglophone grievances, while
armed militants appear inclined to continue fighting. The Church, representing nearly a third of Cameroonians, could be an
arbitrator, but its clergy have taken divergent positions on the crisis.
Why does it matter? Other
than the Catholic clergy, there are few prospective peacemakers. If no
one fills that role, the separatist sentiment already voiced by many
Anglophones will continue to grow, fuelling further violence and
exacerbating the ongoing insurgency in the Anglophone regions, with
elections in late 2018 a flashpoint.
What should be done? The
Church should bridge its divides and state its impartiality on the
thorniest question facing Anglophone regions – federalism versus decentralization. A clergy able to project a position of neutrality
could work with other trusted actors to mediate between Anglophone
leaders and the state, and stem a dangerous and growing crisis.
I. Overview
Cameroon’s Anglophone crisis, which
began in October 2016, has morphed into conflict between security forces
and increasingly well-armed separatists fighting in the name of the
country’s marginalised English-speaking minority. The separatist impulse
among Anglophones is growing as President Paul Biya’s government shrugs
off the community’s historical grievances. Violence has spread: more
than 100 civilians and at least 43 members of the security forces have
reportedly died in the last seven months, as have an unknown number of
armed militants.
Some evidence suggests that separatists
control territory; 34,000 refugees are sheltering in precarious
conditions in Nigeria and about 40,000 persons are displaced in the
Southwest Anglophone region. Many militants apparently believe they are
better served by fighting in order to negotiate with Biya’s government
from a position of strength. The African Union and Western powers have
called for dialogue. The government agrees on the need for talks, but
refuses Anglophone activists’ calls for outside mediation and opposes
any discussion of federalism. It has jailed Anglophone leaders with whom
it was formerly talking.
The Catholic Church could help break
this dangerous stalemate. Present in all ten of Cameroon’s regions, the
Church is one of the country’s strongest institutions. Almost a third of
Cameroonians are Catholic, and the Church operates a dense network of
schools and hospitals. Cameroonians take its views seriously. At
present, however, its public divisions, particularly between Anglophone
and Francophone clergy, stand in the way of it playing a constructive
role. It is not too late for the Church to bridge these divides.
Anglophone and Francophone bishops should come together in a public
statement to affirm their neutrality on the issue most contentious in
the crisis – that of federalism versus decentralisation – and state
their willingness to mediate.
The Church also should renew its calls
for an end to violence and for Anglophone leaders and the government to
enter negotiations. Given that, for now, direct talks between the two
sides appear unlikely, the Church, if it is able to project neutrality
and win trust on both sides, might play a behind-the-scenes role to
allow for indirect communication between them. It could usefully push
for prisoner release and some form of amnesty for Anglophone leaders who
have fled the country, both likely prerequisites for talks. It could
continue working together with other religious institutions, such as the
Presbyterian Church in Cameroon, which in January 2017 stated its
readiness to mediate, and the Cameroon Baptist Convention, as well as
credible civil society associations and traditional rulers. As violence
appears set to escalate, particularly ahead of Cameroon’s 2018
presidential election, potential mediators and peacemakers are few. The
Church should overcome its divisions, position itself as a neutral
arbiter and help resolve an increasingly deadly and worrisome crisis.
https://youtu.be/qoVivrIyAcA
Chronology of Developments in Cameroon’s Anglophone Crisis
II. A History of Political Engagement and Divisions
Cameroon’s
Catholic clergy have often been divided at times of political turmoil.
The best-known case dates to the 1970s, involving a split over the fate
of Archbishop Albert Ndongmo, whom the government claimed supported the
insurgent Union of the Peoples of Cameroon (Union des peuples du
Cameroon, UPC). The government at the time, headed by President Ahmadou
Ahidjo, asked Ndongmo to negotiate with the insurgents, but then
arrested him for collaborating with them, and in 1970 condemned him to
death (a sentence later commuted to life in prison). Although priests
drafted a memorandum denouncing Ndongmo’s incarceration, Jean Zoa, the
archbishop of the Cameroonian capital, Yaoundé, who was close to the
regime, refused to sign it. When Ahidjo pardoned Ndongmo in 1975, Zoa’s
archdiocese declined to join the rest of the Church in celebrating his
release.
Conflicts
within the Catholic Church often have an ethnic dimension, pitting
priests from the influential Bamiléké community against those hailing
from other groups. Rivalries over postings and promotions are common. In
1987, a group of mainly ethnic Bassa priests in the Douala archdiocese
wrote a memorandum to the Vatican Among the appointments drawing their
ire was that of Christian Tumi, who comes from the Northwest region and
is a member of the “grasslands” ethnic groups to which the Bamiléké are
related, to the position of archbishop of Garoua, in Cameroon’s North
region. The memorandum described Tumi, in barely disguised pejorative terms, as “Anglophone Bamiléké.
In July 1999, when André Wouking, a Bamiléké, was appointed archbishop
of Yaoundé (a place many from the Beti ethnic group see as their
territory), Christians protested on the Bafoussam-Yaoundé highway the
day of his inauguration.
A
few years later, the Catholic Church was divided once more as Cameroon
began a turbulent transition to multiparty politics, replete with
crackdowns on pro-democracy protesters. In 1990, the Cameroon Peoples’
Democratic Movement (which had been ruling since 1960, albeit under a
different name) organised nationwide rallies against what it termed the
“precipitous” introduction of multiparty politics. In Yaoundé, the
rallies ended on 30 March with a mass held in the cathedral led by
Archbishop Zoa. Tumi, by then a cardinal and figurehead of the democracy
movement, objected to what he considered an authoritarian manoeuvre
On 26 May 1990
oppositionists launched a new party in Bamenda named the Social
Democratic Front. After police killed six of its supporters that same
day, the Anglophone archbishop of Bamenda, Paul Verdzekov, organised a
memorial service in his cathedral. In response, Archbishop Zoa convened a
counter-mass in the Yaoundé cathedral to, as he put it, “cleanse the
image of the Catholic Church from the unholy service” in Bamenda
The Catholic Church, or
individual clergy, have continued to express political views since the
1990s, notably concerning the conduct of elections. And differences have
persisted between conservative clergy close to the authorities in
Yaoundé and those more willing to speak out. Another
example was during the presidential election in 2011. Cardinal Tumi
decried electoral fraud, but the archbishop of Yaoundé sent a
congratulatory message to the head of state and organised an ecumenical
thanksgiving at the cathedral of Yaoundé. The
Church has established itself as a leading actor in Cameroon’s politics,
but such divisions continue to undermine its potential to play a
positive role. The Anglophone crisis is no exception.
III. The Church in the Anglophone Crisis
In addition to ethnic
divides, the Church suffers from fissures between Anglophones and
Francophones. There are five ecclesiastic provinces in the country, all
under the National Episcopal Conference of Cameroon (NECC). Four of them
are French-speaking, while the ecclesiastic provinces of Bamenda
administers the predominantly English-speaking Northwest and Southwest
regions, under the aegis of the Bamenda Provincial Episcopal Conference
(BAPEC). Not surprisingly, the six bishops of the Anglophone regions
express more concern about the crisis than do those in Francophone
areas, reflecting anger among the Anglophone flock at the central
government’s actions and the sympathy of the clergy in Anglophone
regions for Anglophone grievances.
Two issues related to
the crisis are particularly divisive among the clergy. The first
concerns the structure of the state, namely whether to advocate for
decentralisation, federalism or even independence for a new Anglophone
state. The national ecclesiastical hierarchy supports decentralisation
within a unified state. Touring the affected regions in May 2017,
Archbishop Samuel Kleda, president of the NECC, asserted that the
conference had asked the government to implement decentralisation, as
stipulated by the 1996 constitutional law.
In contrast, some
Anglophone priests have gone so far as to call for the creation of a new
state. In April 2017, for instance, Father Wilfred Emeh of the Kumba
diocese called for the restoration of the statehood of Southern
Cameroons (he proposed federalism as a step toward achieving
independence). The next month, Father Gerald Jumbam of the Kumbo diocese
wrote an open letter to Archbishop Kleda supporting full independence
for the Anglophone areas and calling federalists “cowards standing on
the fence”. He was joined later in May by
Father David Fomanka, former Catholic education secretary of Mamfe
diocese, who advocated for independence in an open letter to “Southern
Cameroonians”.
These three priests all
now live abroad. Their stance undoubtedly reflects the frustrations of a
section of the Anglophone population. But the vast majority of
Anglophone Cameroon’s 350 priests are more cautious, saying little in
public and privately supporting either federalism or effective
decentralisation – not independence. “Memorandum
presented to the head of state, His Excellency President Paul Biya, by
the bishops of the ecclesiastical province of Bamenda on the current
situation of unrest in the Northwest and Southwest regions of Cameroon”,
BAPEC, 22 December 2016. Crisis Group interviews, senior Catholic
clergy, Buea and Bamenda, March 2018. most respect the Church’s hierarchy and the principle that the voice of the Church should be heard through the bishops)
The second division is
over whether to support a school boycott declared in January 2017 by
Anglophone militants, along with a general strike (they vowed to turn
cities into “ghost towns”). The boycott continued throughout 2017 but,
in 2018, classes have resumed at many schools, especially in cities.
Fomanka, Emeh and Jumbam support the boycott, while Bishop George Nkuo,
president of the BAPEC and effective head or spokesperson of the
Anglophone part of the Church, disagrees, arguing that children’s
education must be respected as a primordial mission of the Church
Still, some
disagreements remain at the level of the bishops. In May 2017,
Archbishop Kleda pressured Anglophone bishops to ensure that classes
resume immediately. Bishop Immanuel Bushu of Buea had a different
opinion. Without supporting the boycott, he did say that it expressed
the wish of parents and that progress toward resolving the crisis, and
thus reopening schools, could better be made if the government released
detainees.
The position of leading
figures within the Church against the boycott has provoked the anger of
Anglophone militants and prompted them to threaten clergy. They also
have set fire to schools not taking part in the boycott. Militants
burned down two Catholic primary schools in Tobin and Kumbo on 5 August
2017 and badly damaged the Sacred Heart Catholic College in Bamenda on
18 September.
For the most part,
Francophone bishops have remained silent about the crisis, allowing
Archbishop Kleda to speak on behalf of the national Church. Nor did they
speak out when a government-fabricated consortium of parents filed a
series of lawsuits against Anglophone clergymen, accusing them of aiding
the school boycott. In April 2017, the Bamenda Court of First Instance
summoned several Anglophone bishops, as well as the moderator of the
Presbyterian Church in Cameroon and the executive president of the
Cameroon Baptist Convention, in connection with this case, with state
prosecutors adding their own charges of endangering national unity,
accusing the bishops of making statements that had paralysed the
schools. A court in Buea summoned bishops from the Southwest shortly
thereafter. Charges have since been dropped, but the government has
proved itself willing to put clergy on trial for political reasons
As
in the past, the Church is caught between the Yaoundé government and
its opponents on the ground. The top-down pressure came even from the
papal nuncio (recently replaced), who pushed Anglophone bishops to
reopen schools, but expressed no concern about either the schools’
safety from arson or the politically motivated prosecution of bishops. In Yaoundé diplomatic circles, the pope’s emissary was seen as having taken the government’s side in the crisis.
Despite the
polarisation, Anglophone and Francophone bishops share some views, and
important Church figures are trying to find middle ground. For example,
despite differences in tone, both Anglophone and Francophone bishops
condemned the heavy military crackdown on civilians between September
and October 2017. This precedent indicates that greater coherence, and a
more constructive role for the Church, are possible.
IV. The Church’s Potential as Mediator
In order to play a more
effective role and help stem an insurrection and counter the risk of
civil war in Anglophone Cameroon, the Catholic Church must overcome its
internal divisions or at least find enough common ground to project a
position of neutrality. Several commentators have called upon the Church
to mediate between the warring sides, as it has done in neighbouring
countries, such as the Democratic Republic of Congo and the Central
African Republic. If it is to play that role, the Church should avoid taking firm positions on the main issues that divide the protagonists.
To this end, bishops,
Anglophone and Francophone, could usefully come together and issue a
public statement, declaring that they remain neutral on the main issues
of concern, especially federalism versus decentralisation, underlining
that Anglophone feelings of marginalisation have some justification,
denouncing human rights abuses and calling for restraint by all sides.
They could then state their interest in mediating the crisis. The
details of such mediation would have to be worked out away from the
public glare. Such an approach would potentially boost public trust
(especially in Anglophone areas) in the church, while helping to remove
the spotlight from the more radical and polarising positions taken by
some priests.
Ultimately, direct talks
between the main protagonists are the most promising way to avoid
escalation. But the current violence and polarisation suggest that their
prospects, even with mediators involved, are slim at present. Instead,
the most logical step for the Church, if it is able to position itself
as a trusted arbiter, would be to talk separately to both sides to
understand their differences in opinion and their red lines. According
to Crisis Group sources, such parallel consultations may already be
happening, albeit in a dispersed way. They
should be strengthened through better coordination between bishops, so
that those involved can speak for the Church as a whole, and potentially
developed into shuttle diplomacy, with the goal of increasing
understanding and reducing the distance between the sides in preparation
for direct talks. To do so, the Church could usefully team up with
other denominations, especially the influential Presbyterian Church,
which has indicated its willingness to play a role and which already
collaborates well with the Catholic Church. It could also involve the Cameroon Baptist Convention, as well as credible civil society associations and traditional rulers.
Even ahead of direct
talks, the Church likely will have to address the exile of Anglophone
activists. Many want to return home but are understandably frightened by
the government’s continued imprisonment of Anglophone militants. It
could push for some form of amnesty, prisoner releases and guarantees
for returnees, perhaps in exchange for a ceasefire from the Anglophone
armed militias.
The precise agenda of eventual talks between Anglophone leaders and the government cannot be determined in advance. But even preliminary discussions need to take account of the Anglophones’ deep feelings of alienation. The government cannot continue to dismiss this sentiment and should be open to discussions of federalism, even if that is not the only option for addressing Anglophone concerns (decentralisation that devolves real authority to regions likely would go a long way in that direction).
The issue of separatism
is trickier. A growing number of militants, tired of what they see as
Yaoundé’s bad faith, are attracted to this option (which they tend to
term “restoration of statehood”). But it remains a red line for Yaoundé,
and supporting secession remains a treasonable offense. At
the same time, separatist movements have established themselves on the
ground and cannot simply be ignored. Whether the government’s engagement
in genuine dialogue with Anglophone leaders and either meaningful
decentralisation or federalism would suck the oxygen from those
movements remains uncertain. But without talks and the devolution of
power in some form to Anglophone and other regions, separatist sentiment
is very likely to continue growing and the conflict to escalate further
with a risk of mutating into civil war.
V. Conclusion
Cameroon faces critical
risks going into this electoral year. Boko Haram remains active in the
Far North, instability prevails along the eastern border with the
Central African Republic and popular discontent continues to roil large
cities. But the insurgency in Anglophone areas, and the clumsy
government response, is now the main threat to the country’s stability. A
negotiated solution is vital. The Catholic Church, if it can resolve or
keep under wraps its internal divisions and project neutrality, would
be well placed to help bring it about. International actors should
support Church initiatives and encourage greater unity among the clergy.
But the onus is also on the Church itself to display greater coherence.
Nairobi/Brussels, 26 April 2018
Timeline
1 January 1960
The Francophone territory of Cameroon gains independence from France, becoming the Republic of Cameroon. Anglophone areas gain independence from Britain in October 1961 and merge with the new state as the Federal Republic of Cameroon.
The Francophone territory of Cameroon gains independence from France, becoming the Republic of Cameroon. Anglophone areas gain independence from Britain in October 1961 and merge with the new state as the Federal Republic of Cameroon.
20 May 1972
After a referendum changing the country’s official name to the United Republic of Cameroon, then President Ahidjo intensifies centralisation, suppresses federalism and causes outrage among Anglophones.
After a referendum changing the country’s official name to the United Republic of Cameroon, then President Ahidjo intensifies centralisation, suppresses federalism and causes outrage among Anglophones.
March 1984
President Paul Biya changes the country’s official name back to the Francophone-era Republic of Cameroon and removes from the flag the second star representing the Anglophone part of the federation.
President Paul Biya changes the country’s official name back to the Francophone-era Republic of Cameroon and removes from the flag the second star representing the Anglophone part of the federation.
11 October 2016
Tensions break open as Anglophone lawyers from Northwest and Southwest regions lead strikes to demand the full restoration of the common law system in their regions. The demands are ignored by the government, which uses force against the marching lawyers.
Tensions break open as Anglophone lawyers from Northwest and Southwest regions lead strikes to demand the full restoration of the common law system in their regions. The demands are ignored by the government, which uses force against the marching lawyers.
21 November 2016
Teachers go on strike in Bamenda, and thousands of Anglophones march to demand respect for their educational system. Police and army respond violently, shooting and killing at least two.
Teachers go on strike in Bamenda, and thousands of Anglophones march to demand respect for their educational system. Police and army respond violently, shooting and killing at least two.
8 December 2016
Violent clashes erupt in Bamenda between anti-government inhabitants and security forces. Catholic bishops publish a memorandum listing Anglophone grievances. The government accuses them of fuelling the crisis.
Violent clashes erupt in Bamenda between anti-government inhabitants and security forces. Catholic bishops publish a memorandum listing Anglophone grievances. The government accuses them of fuelling the crisis.
13-14 January 2017
Negotiations with the teachers’ unions and civil society organisations collapse amid police abuses, including the shooting and killing of two civilians in Bamenda. Anglophone leaders initiate “Operation Ghost Town” and boycott schools in Northwest and Southwest regions.
Negotiations with the teachers’ unions and civil society organisations collapse amid police abuses, including the shooting and killing of two civilians in Bamenda. Anglophone leaders initiate “Operation Ghost Town” and boycott schools in Northwest and Southwest regions.
17 January 2017
Civil society leaders are arrested, but school closures continue and protests intensify. The government shuts down access to the Internet for 92 days.
Civil society leaders are arrested, but school closures continue and protests intensify. The government shuts down access to the Internet for 92 days.
23 January 2017
President Biya creates a National Commission for Bilingualism and Multiculturalism as part of a response to address grievances. Anglophone militants criticise the initiative as too little,
too late.
President Biya creates a National Commission for Bilingualism and Multiculturalism as part of a response to address grievances. Anglophone militants criticise the initiative as too little,
too late.
2 August 2017
Crisis Group publishes a report on the root causes of the crisis, warns about the risk of violence and calls on the Cameroonian government to initiate a dialogue on decentralisation, federalism and governance reforms.
Crisis Group publishes a report on the root causes of the crisis, warns about the risk of violence and calls on the Cameroonian government to initiate a dialogue on decentralisation, federalism and governance reforms.
12-17 September 2017
Three homemade bombs explode in Bamenda, with no human casualties. Over the following three weeks, security forces kill at least 40 people during the brutal suppression of large protests across major towns and villages in Northwest and Southwest provinces.
Three homemade bombs explode in Bamenda, with no human casualties. Over the following three weeks, security forces kill at least 40 people during the brutal suppression of large protests across major towns and villages in Northwest and Southwest provinces.
19 October 2017
Crisis Group publishes a briefing warning of an imminent insurgency in Anglophone regions and calls on President Biya to adopt de-escalating measures and initiate a dialogue on decentralisation and federalism.
Crisis Group publishes a briefing warning of an imminent insurgency in Anglophone regions and calls on President Biya to adopt de-escalating measures and initiate a dialogue on decentralisation and federalism.
1 December 2017
After Anglophone separatists begin carrying
out armed attacks in November, killing at least eight members of the security forces, and after four bombs explode in Bamenda, President
Biya declares war against the Anglophone separatists.
After Anglophone separatists begin carrying
out armed attacks in November, killing at least eight members of the security forces, and after four bombs explode in Bamenda, President
Biya declares war against the Anglophone separatists.
21 December 2017
Crisis Group publishes a statement warning that separatist militias are rapidly growing and calling on President Biya to urgently initiate a genuine effort at dialogue on reforms.
Crisis Group publishes a statement warning that separatist militias are rapidly growing and calling on President Biya to urgently initiate a genuine effort at dialogue on reforms.
11 February 2018
Alongside continued killings of security forces members, separatist militias start kidnapping Cameroonian officials and foreign nationals.
Alongside continued killings of security forces members, separatist militias start kidnapping Cameroonian officials and foreign nationals.
26 April 2018
Crisis Group publishes a briefing emphasising the importance of the Catholic Church’s role in mediating between Anglophone separatists and the state to stem a dangerous and growing crisis.
Crisis Group publishes a briefing emphasising the importance of the Catholic Church’s role in mediating between Anglophone separatists and the state to stem a dangerous and growing crisis.
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