Hope Dies in Côte d’Ivoire (Ivory Coast)*

August 11th, 2010 TFT Staff Posted in International News, OpEd No Comments »

This begs the question of how this was allowed to happen and to thrive. Surely this was not what the people of the Ivory Coast wanted. The answer to the external question “Cui bono?” is the French. The system of the Pacte Coloniale set the scene for this state of learned dependence. The vultures of French business have returned en masse to the Ivory Coast. The French have conned the United Nations in supporting their military presence there. The death grip on the Ivory Coast finances of the CFA franc and the control of the economy by the French Treasury has made economic independence a sick and feeble joke. Nothing has changed very much in the fifty years of Ivory Coast’s independence except that local politicians have cut themselves into the action in the French exploitation and control of the country. There is a rude but accurate saying which originated in Argentina but which can be applied just as well to the Ivory Coast – “If shit had value, the poor would be born without assholes.”

By Dr. Gary K. Busch

On August 7th, the fiftieth anniversary of its independence, the politicians of the Ivory Coast announced that the oft-postponed national elections would take place on October 31, 2010. Unfortunately, for the large bulk of the Ivoirian population this election is a cruel joke. Elections are meant to resolve problems; to clarify the political power issues; to charge political victors and parties with the responsibilities for the programs they campaigned for during the election. In this election the parties do not have programs; half the country is occupied by a piratical rabble of failed soldiers; no disarmament of the rebels has effectively taken place; no legitimacy is ascribed to the voting rolls or the electoral process; the occupying French forces and their UN supporters dominate the security of the country; and the aged and fading political party ballerinas from the past refuse to allow younger, more agile, performers to take on the major roles. It is a shambles and fools no one.

Read the rest of this entry »

AddThis Social Bookmark Button

Camerounese Military Beat Up Journalist Filming in a Public Premises-You-tubed!

June 18th, 2010 TFT Staff Posted in Editorial, Video No Comments »

AddThis Social Bookmark Button

Mola Njoh Litumbe EQUINOX TV INTERVIEW: Parts 3 & 4

May 20th, 2010 TFT Staff Posted in Interviews, Southern Cameroons National News, Video No Comments »

Part 3/4

Part 4/4

AddThis Social Bookmark Button

La République du Cameroun’s Phony Cinquantenaire, Southern Cameroons Truths:

May 20th, 2010 TFT Staff Posted in Interviews, Southern Cameroons National News, Uncategorized, Video No Comments »

PART 1

PART 2

AddThis Social Bookmark Button

50 Years! What is République Du Cameroun Celebrating?*

May 18th, 2010 TFT Staff Posted in OpEd, Southern Cameroons National News, Video 1 Comment »

The foreign dignitaries who will dine and wine with the colonizer of the people of the Southern Cameroons will be giving comfort to their oppressors; they will be regarded as aiding and abetting an international crime, if not, acting as accessories after the fact. In lending support to this outrageous campaign, they should know that the leader of this country is acting in contempt of the decision last year of the African Union that the Southern Cameroons and the Republic of Cameroun should hold talks to agree on new constitutional arrangements to resolve the burning issue of colonization and assimilation in violation of the inalienable right to self-determination.

By G. Achu
Public Affairs Analyst
M.P.A; LLM (International Legal Studies)
Original Publication: Southern Cameroons/Cameroun Listservs

Regarding the purpose of celebrating the 50th Anniversary of the independence and unification of Cameroun, treated in the previous posting, the main issue is not whether the (de facto) association succeeded) but whether there was a legal Union in 1961 between Southern Cameroons (SC) and Republic of Cameroun (LRC) under the auspices of the United Kingdom as administering authority and the United Nations. From the evidence we have reviewed, the answer is NO.

In 1946, the UN entrusted the administration of French Cameroun and British Cameroons to France and the United Kingdom, respectively, with a mission to run and prepare each of them for independence. Their mission was never to reconstitute or help in reconstituting German Kamerun or parts thereof that vanished before, after or at the end of World War I. The acts of two authorities, permanent members of the Security Council and also of the Trusteeship Council, coupled with the arbitrary acts of the United Nations, resulted in a betrayal of the trust of the international community to ensure that the trust territories evolved unconditionally to separate independence as provided by the UN Charter. Instead of granting independence to British Cameroons as an entirety as was the case of the former German Colonies of Togo, Tanganyika (Tanzania) and South West Africa (Namibia), the UN was instigated to apply a double standard to the Southern Cameroons by forcing it to choose between the devil and the deep sea; that is: independence by joining with Nigeria (from which the SC had separated because of marginalization in 1954) or the LRC (former French Cameroun, embroiled in the French/Ahidjo versus UPC war of independence) .

Read the rest of this entry »

AddThis Social Bookmark Button

République du Cameroun: The Double Dichotomy and 50th Anniversary

May 18th, 2010 TFT Staff Posted in OpEd, Southern Cameroons National News 1 Comment »

If your independence was proclaimed on 1 January 1960, and you are celebrating the 50th anniversary of your accession to sovereignty on 1 January 2010, then it means that your Independence Day which is your National Day, is 1 January. This is fact not fiction! As fact, its universality is unquestionable. For the Republic of Cameroun to be celebrating 1st January and 20th May as National Day, is a dichotomy so stunning that it deserves the opening of a new field of investigation in Political Science and International Relations.

By Vincent N. Feko
Senior Citizen, Human Rights Defender, Group Leader

“Half a century ago, our country’s destiny changed suddenly. On 1 January 1960, our independence was proclaimed. As from tomorrow, we will therefore be celebrating the 50th anniversary of our accession to sovereignty.”( Paul Biya, President of la Republique du Cameroun [LRC], end of year Address, 31st December 2009). The President continues, “The celebrations will naturally culminate in our National Day on the 20th of May.” He adds, “The fiftieth anniversary of independence in 2010 is a prelude to the fiftieth anniversary of Reunification which we will be celebrating in 2011.” This excerpt is the source of the Double Dichotomy.

If your independence was proclaimed on 1 January 1960, and you are celebrating the 50th anniversary of your accession to sovereignty on 1 January 2010, then it means that your Independence Day which is your National Day, is 1 January. This is fact not fiction! As fact, its universality is unquestionable. For the Republic of Cameroun to be celebrating 1st January and 20th May as National Day, is a dichotomy so stunning that it deserves the opening of a new field of investigation in Political Science and International Relations.

Read the rest of this entry »

AddThis Social Bookmark Button

The Euro Crisis and Africa

May 17th, 2010 TFT Staff Posted in International Business, International Finance, International News, OpEd No Comments »

This bailout starts off with an initial pot of one trillion Euros from which Greece can borrow to pay off its debts. The hope is that similar debt crises in Portugal, Spain and Italy can be averted by a show of strength in the Greek crisis.

This agreement was not reached in an amicable discussion among the wealthier European states. The Germans, who provide the bulk of the cash, were bludgeoned into agreement by Sarkozy of France who twice threatened to pull France out of the Euro zone if the Germans wouldn’t go along with the plan. This is very important as France is not playing only with its own money. To a large degree it is cushioned by the reserves it holds from francophone Africa as part of the integration of the CFA francs into the Euro zone.

By Dr. Gary K Busch
Original Source: Ocnus.net

As we read of the current crisis in Greece and the emergency bailout of the European Union of the Euro it is may seem a little unclear as to the effect this will have in Africa. However, Africa, and francophone Africa in particular, is likely to be hit hard by the falling Euro and the diversion of national reserves in Europe to the propping up of the Euro zone. This bailout starts off with an initial pot of one trillion Euros from which Greece can borrow to pay off its debts. The hope is that similar debt crises in Portugal, Spain and Italy can be averted by a show of strength in the Greek crisis.

This agreement was not reached in an amicable discussion among the wealthier European states. The Germans, who provide the bulk of the cash, were bludgeoned into agreement by Sarkozy of France who twice threatened to pull France out of the Euro zone if the Germans wouldn’t go along with the plan. This is very important as France is not playing only with its own money. To a large degree it is cushioned by the reserves it holds from francophone Africa as part of the integration of the CFA francs into the Euro zone.

There are actually two separate CFA francs in circulation. The first is that of the West African Economic and Monetary Union (WAEMU) which comprises eight West African countries (Benin, Burkina Faso, Guinea-Bissau, Ivory Coast, Mali, Niger, Senegal and Togo. The second is that of the Central African Economic and Monetary Community (CEMAC) which comprises six Central African countries (Cameroon, Central African Republic, Chad, Congo-Brazzaville, Equatorial Guinea and Gabon), This division corresponds to the pre-colonial AOF (Afrique Occidentale Française) and the AEF (Afrique Equatoriale Française), with the exception that Guinea-Bissau that was formerly Portuguese and Equatorial Guinea, formerly Spanish.

The WAEMU CFA franc is issued by the BCEAO (Banque Centrale des Etats de l’Afrique de l’Ouest and the Bank of the Central African States (BEAC) controls the CEMAC CFA franc. These currencies were originally pegged at 100 CFA for each French franc but, after France joined the European Community’s Euro zone at a fixed rate of 6.65957 French francs to one Euro, the CFA rate to the Euro was fixed at CFA 665,957 to each Euro, maintaining the 100 to 1 ratio. It is important to note that it is the responsibility of the French Treasury to guarantee the convertibility of the CFA to the Euro.

Read the rest of this entry »

AddThis Social Bookmark Button

French Africa:50 Years of Non-Independence (1)

March 14th, 2010 TFT Staff Posted in Music, Video No Comments »

2010, French Africa commemorates 50 years of non-independence from France.

It comes with lies that smell of roses and champagne.

We present a musical interlude as reflection from the timeless KASSAV, which reminds us of the import of knowing our true history.

In beautiful rhythm only KASSAV can conjure, but with a tinge if indignation and resentment, they remind us: “Our history will raise our soul, Our soul will liberate us”

PARTIAL TRANSLATION IN ENGLISH**

We’ve learn everything from their books
We wanted to resemble them
To a point that we forgot our own history
But the YORUBA warrior was courageous
Despite the whip and misery
Today he’s standing straight and proud

They brainwashed us
Their history is only a part of ours
Our history will raise our soul
Our soul will liberate us
They have their belief and we have ours
If only we’ve learn what we could do together
Our history wouldn’t be forgotten

**English Translation culled from YouTube posting.

AddThis Social Bookmark Button

INTERVIEW: Carlson Anyangwe … Too Trusting a Man?

February 27th, 2010 TFT Staff Posted in Interviews, Southern Cameroons National News No Comments »

Why has it been so difficult to unite the rather divided Southern Cameroons movements and why are there so many movements fighting for the same cause?

The reason is that those fighting occupation hardly ever do so under one constituted organization or structure. Ideology, tactics and strategy dictate this course. In the anti-Apartheid movement in South Africa, there was the African National Congress, the United Democratic Front, COSATU, Black Consciousness Movement, Pan-Africanist Congress of Azania, Inkhata Freedom Movement, Black Sash etc. In Zimbabwe, there was ZANU and ZAPU amongst the most prominent. In Angola there was MPLA, UNITA , etc. The story was the same for Mozambique, Eritrea, East Timor, and so on. In Palestine, there is Hamas and the PLO. All these groups do constitute one Liberation Movement for their various peoples.

The Southern Cameroons is no exception. There is one Southern Cameroons Liberation Movement that is fighting for the sovereign independence of the former British Southern Cameroons. And yes, there are several groups such as the Southern Cameroons National Council (SCNC), the Southern Cameroons Youth League (SCYL), the Southern Cameroons People Organization (SCAPO) and other groups that have been formed by fighters for freedom that are all are united in purpose for the common cause of freedom from colonial captivity. I would be surprised if you do not know that the occupying state, République du Cameroun expends a lot of time and huge sums of money on what are demonstrably futile efforts to scuttle our national liberation struggle: rented groups and paid individuals (including some of its own citizens) are deployed to cause confusion, diversion and give the perception of division. These are ancient but familiar and ineffectual rearguard actions of all colonial occupiers. No one has ever been fooled, and we are not.

To continue, click: Carlson Anyangwe Interview at CAMACDA

AddThis Social Bookmark Button

Hollow Words? Obama and Human Rights in Africa

October 11th, 2009 TFT Staff Posted in Video No Comments »

 

AddThis Social Bookmark Button