Politics
“Peace is the sine qua non for the survival of human kind. Peace remains threatened by conflict, terrorism, poverty...Peace is our most precious asset...
Let us mobilise and through our policies, behaviours and action, let us focus on people...
Let us safe the Congo Basin... Let us safe Lake Chad in so doing we will succeed in protecting the planet for the good of humankind.

72ND SESSION OF THE UNITED NATIONS GENERAL ASSEMBLY
(New York, 13 September - 24 December 2017)
General Debate
Theme:Focusing on People: Striving for
Peace and a Decent Life for All on a Sustainable Planet.
**********
STATEMENT BY H.E. PAUL BIYA,
PRESIDENT OF THE REPUBLIC OF CAMEROON
Mr. President,
Heads of State and Government,
The Secretary-General of the United Nations Organization,
Heads of Delegation,
I congratulate you, Mr President, on your election as chair of this session of the United Nations General Assembly. I do believe you be served by your rich experience in successfully steering our proceedings. You can count on the full cooperation of my delegation.
My congratulations also go to Ambassador Peter THOMSON, your predecessor and key mastermind behind the 2030 Sustainable Development Agenda, on his outstanding achievements.
Lastly, I would like to congratulate Mr. Antonio GUTERRES on his unanimous election as Secretary-General of our Organization.
Mr. Secretary-General, please rest assured of Cameroon’s constant support in the performance of your lofty and delicate duties.
Ladies and Gentlemen,
This session is being held within a global context marked by multiple hotbeds of tension worldwide, where terrorism continues to affect thousands of people, human activity is causing climate disruptions, and poverty is far from declining. However, it is also taking place in parallel with laudable efforts towards implementing the Sustainable Development Agenda designed for Humanity’s fulfilment to ensure that no one is left behind.
Hence the full pertinence of the general debate under the theme, (I quote) “Focusing on People: Striving for Peace and a Decent Life for All on a Sustainable Planet”.
Our debates and, especially, our conclusions will constitute a litmus test of our commitment to the ideal of the peoples of the United Nations who, in the preamble to the Charter, state their resolve to save succeeding generations from the scourge of war, and to promote social progress and better standards of life for all peoples.
Mr. President,
For Cameroon and most of our States, peace is the sine qua non for the survival of humanity and for sustainable development. Such peace remains dangerously under threat, notably from terrorism, conflicts, poverty and climate disruptions. Today, I would say, we are all "beggars for peace". And such persistent threats are of utmost concern to us all.
Mr. President,
Today, no continent, no country is spared by the scourge of terrorism, the atrocities of which unfortunately have become part and parcel of daily life. Let me mention a few examples:
- August 2017, attacks in Barcelona and Ouagadougou;
- July 2016, bombing of Baghdad: 292 dead;
- October 2015, crash of a Russian Airbus in the Sinai: 224 dead;
- March 2015, attack of mosques in Sana’a: 142 dead;
- November 2015, attacks in Paris and Saint Denis: 130 dead, ...
When one thinks of Maiduguri, Kolofata, Fotokol ..., nothing but nameless, faceless bodies come to mind... The number of victims of the Boko-Haram terrorist sect in the Lake Chad basin is estimated at 2000. Cameroon and other neighbouring countries are grappling with the sect, which constantly changes its methods and tactics. We appreciate the support of our partners in this fight against barbarism.
The fight against this jihadist sect Boko-Haram requires more widespread mobilization if we really mean to stamp out this threat. It is killing our peoples, our communities, our independence and our democracy. Peace is at stake. In this regard, we look forward to the arrival in the Lake Chad region of the high-level mission mandated by the Security Council to the UN Secretary-General under resolution 2349.
Mr. President,
We condemn continuing conflicts in Africa, Asia, Latin America and the Middle East, which are causing pain and hardship ... so many dead ... so many refugees and displaced persons ... so many children roaming without a roof over their heads and with an uncertain or even shattered future...
Cameroon, which has hosted and continues to host thousands of refugees from the Central African Republic and Nigeria, understands how much they feel hurt, victimized and threatened in their very existence.
Therefore, let us mobilize and, through our policies, behaviours and actions, re-focus on people.
Ladies and Gentlemen,
Peace is under threat not only from terrorism and other conflicts, but also from persisting poverty. The Security Council has most appropriately reiterated that poverty is a serious threat. How then can one understand that we have difficulty tackling it accordingly?
The numerous declarations and resolutions, the various United Nations development decades, as well as the plans of action and other agendas adopted by the United Nations are not fully effective. The result is clear: poverty persists and the gap between rich and poor countries is ever widening. This situation is exacerbated by the fall in commodity prices.
Mr. President, let us all mobilize in a strong surge of solidarity to roll back poverty. Let us match our actions with our words. In so doing, we will offer conditions for a decent life to our people..., thus focusing on People!
Mr. President,
We must, for present and future generations, save our planet. We therefore welcome the Paris Climate Agreement, which Cameroon, I recall, was among the first countries to sign and ratify. We are pleased that steps are being taken to implement it effectively.
I would like to take this opportunity to strongly reiterate the legitimate and unanimous wish of developing countries. As we all know, these countries pollute less, and should thus receive from rich countries, which pollute more, multifaceted means to effectively promote the goals of the Paris Agreement at their level.
For Africa, there are two major challenges.
Firstly, ongoing forest degradation in Central Africa. Let us save the Congo Basin, the earth’s second lung.
Secondly, the desertification of Lake Chad, which is drying up. This vast body of water, which is essential for the survival of communities and biodiversity, has already lost 90% of its initial surface. Let us save Lake Chad!
By so doing, we will be contributing towards preserving the planet for the greater good of humanity.
Mr. President,
The quest for peace concerns us all. All countries must pool forces to achieve peace.
Therefore, is it not yet time for the voice of poor countries, especially those of Africa, to be heard?
Is it not time, or rather high time, Africa’s message to the World were better taken into account?
Is it not high time to restructure our Organization to give more weight to Africa’s voice within a revitalized General Assembly, a Security Council that is more receptive and equitable to us?
A world characterized by greater solidarity is the sine qua non for peace on earth.
Mr. President,
Let me now conclude. Peace is our most precious asset. Without peace, we cannot take any sustainable and effective initiative in the interest of our youth and our peoples.
The theme of the debate aptly reminds us of the commitment of the founding fathers of the United Nations, namely to:
- save succeeding generations from the scourge of war; and
- guarantee a decent life for all free from want, through cooperation.
This debate urges us to renew our faith in the ideals and purposes of the United Nations.
Let us together take up the great challenge of world peace and development.
Once again Cameroon, as it did from this very rostrum on 10 September 2000, urges the world to rally together in a great coalition for humanity, placed back at the centre of our policies. For its sake, let us secure peace and a decent life on a sustainable planet.
Thank you, Mr President.
- Details
- Rita Akana
- Hits: 2223
Peaceful protesters who took to the streets today in the Southern Cameroons political, Buea, have vented out their frustrations and anger on the Mayor of Buea, Patrick Ekema Esunge.
The protestors invaded the Mayor’s compound and shattered five of his cars.
They accused him of fighting against the Anglophone struggle and for masterminding the arrest of some Anglophones who have been languishing behind bars in Yaounde prisons.
The protesters went wild when Ekema gunned down one of them.
Two municipal polices were also beaten as they attempted to fight the population.
Since the escalation of the Anglophone Crisis Ekema Patrick has been victimising traders in Buea by forcefully opening shops, buying taxis to fight Ghost Towns and encouraging Government to treat Anglophones with impunity.
- Details
- Rita Akana
- Hits: 2113
I can audaciously say this: President Biya in 1982 was more popular in the two English-speaking provinces than in his native Mvomeka. I was in Bamenda when he came on his maiden visit and watched women and men shed tears of joy when the young successor to Amadou Ahidjo uttered the first words of his speech in English. People had been tired of his predecessor's quarter-of-a-century rule.
I can also say without any fear of contradiction that in 1992 that same person who in 1982 made a triumphal entry to the city of Bamenda became an anathema to the same population in its immense majority. So why the 360 degree turn? How does someone so loved become so despised a few years after and to the point that some go as far as calling for outright cessation?
In 1992 when Fru Ndi was said to be cheated of a presidential election victory, there hostilities began in earnest. A firestorm of ghost towns was launched. Buildings and roads were set on fire and the aim since all actions have goals was to cripple the economy and hopefully dethrone Mr Biya. All actions have consequences and the consequences were dire. Infrastructural degradation aside, armed banditry surged and the economy of the town/province tanked. The town was near ungovernable.The objective to get the economy tailspin, render the towns lawless achieved but Paul Biya is still in power and apparently waxing strong. Logic therefore dictates the question : were we drinking poison hoping that the person popular anger targeted died first?
Anglophones are incontestably very smart Cameroonians but we must not again be the smart people that do dumb things. Rightly frustrated by today's happenings: people unjustifiably arrested and locked up for months for only questioning institutional injustice and some losing their lives in the process the drumbeat by some for military confrontation is understandable. I did not say winable. For one thing to win in a battle field assumes that you have not only the better army, you have better equipment. Anything short of this is suicidal. In fact choosing to fight a lion with bare hands isn't bravery.
Let's look a endless ghost towns as a strategy since much has been said about school boycott. Precedence provides instruction hence the question what did the 1992 bone-dry ghost towns achieve except the road degradation we are left with and complaining about today? Do we want a repeat of the surge in widespread unemployment and armed banditry of the early 1990s as a a result of rendering the towns ungovernable? Like then, today most of those calling for social chaos as a strategy don't live in the chaos, they are comfortable in their homes drinking wine, their children going to school and many driving luxury cars. Who then takes the heat? The common man who can barely afford a plate of beans and puff-puff.
I am by no means asking for the marginalized to do nothing. I am saying there is a wrong way to do even the right thing.We must think and act smart. Decisions taken in anger almost certainly backfires since they are driven more by emotions than reason.
That is why we must look, think before we leap.
Divine Nchamukong
- Details
- Rita Akana
- Hits: 3307
A group of angry youths in Bafia Village, Muyuka Sub Division went amok in the early hours of Tuesday September 19, disrupting lectures at its lone Government High School and upsetting commercial activities at the village market.
The youths reportedly pledged allegiance to the Southern Cameroons Ambazonia Consortium United Front, SCACUF, and chased students and teachers out of classrooms.
Tutors on duty were forced to lift their hands up and paraded across the streets chanting secessionists’ songs.
- Details
- Rita Akana
- Hits: 2419
The people of Southern Cameroons are carrying out mass mobilisation ahead of President Paul Biya’s address to the United Nations tomorrow.
Biya’s address at the UN concerning the Anglophone Crisis may either make or mar Cameroon.
A few days ago, the Southern Cameroons ‘Governing Council’ that took over from the outlawed Anglophone Consortium, called for street demonstrations in the Northwest and Southwest Regions on September 22.
The population is on tenterhooks and Biya must watch-out.
- Details
- Rita Akana
- Hits: 3185
The brain behind the proposed Common Law Lawyers’ Conclave in Mamfe, Barrister Abane Ntui, who is the Vice President of the outlawed Manyu Lawyers’ Association (MALA), has mysterious gone into oblivion.
News of the learned Barrister’s apparent missing days barely 48 hours to the September 23 rendezvous has stunned not only the lawyers but the population as in whole.
Barrister Abane Ntui, who was the host of the Common Law Lawyers conference, is reportedly out of reach.
- Details
- Abeh Valery
- Hits: 1715
Subcategories
Biya Article Count: 73
# Paul Biya and his regime
Explore the political landscape of Cameroon under the rule of Paul Biya, the longest-serving president in Africa who has been in power since 1982. Our Paul Biya and his regime section examines the policies, actions, and controversies of his government, as well as the opposition movements, civil society groups, and international actors that challenge or support his leadership. You'll also find profiles, interviews, and opinions on the key figures and events that shape the political dynamics of Cameroon.
Southern Cameroons Article Count: 549
.# Southern Cameroons, Ambazonia
Learn more about the history, culture, and politics of Ambazonia, the Anglophone regions of Cameroon that have been seeking self-determination and independence from the Francophone-dominated central government. Our Southern Cameroons section covers the ongoing conflict, the humanitarian crisis, the human rights violations, and the peace efforts in the region. You'll also find stories that highlight the rich and diverse heritage, traditions, and aspirations of the Southern Cameroonian people.
Editorial Article Count: 885
# Opinion
Get insights and perspectives on the issues that matter to Cameroon and the world with our opinion section. We feature opinions from our editors, columnists, and guest writers, who share their views and analysis on various topics, such as politics, economy, culture, and society. Our opinion section also welcomes contributions from our readers, who can submit their own opinions and comments. Join the conversation and express your opinions with our opinion section.
