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France responsible for ‘extreme violence’ in Cameroon independence war, report says

Noelle Louise Mekah Fossi, 71, reacts near the Metche Falls where her father Jacob Fossi (unseen), a pro-independence and nationalist activist was murdered, in Bafoussam on January 25, 2025. (AFP)
Noelle Louise Mekah Fossi, 71, reacts near the Metche Falls where her father Jacob Fossi (unseen), a pro-independence and nationalist activist was murdered, in Bafoussam on January 25, 2025. (AFP)
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Updated 29 January 2025

France responsible for ‘extreme violence’ in Cameroon independence war, report says

France responsible for ‘extreme violence’ in Cameroon independence war, report says
  • Between 1956 and 1961, France’s fight against Cameroonian independence claimed “tens of thousands of lives” and left hundreds of thousands displaced, the historians said
  • A 2021 report concluded France bore “overwhelming responsibilities” in the 1994 Rwandan genocide, and a 2020 review examining France’s actions during Algeria’s war of independence called for a “truth commission” and other conciliatory actions

PARIS: France waged a war marked by “extreme violence” during Cameroon’s fight for independence in the late 1950s, historians said in the latest officially commissioned study grappling with Paris’s colonial past released on Tuesday.
The historians found that Paris implemented mass forced displacement, pushed hundreds of thousands of Cameroonians into internment camps and supported brutal militias to squash the central African country’s push for sovereignty.
The historical commission, whose creation was announced by President Emmanuel Macron during a 2022 trip to Yaounde, examined France’s role leading up to when Cameroon gained independence from France on January 1, 1960 and the following years.




History professor Emmanuel Tchumtchoua poses for a portrait next to a martyrs' wall in the village of Bahouan, in Bafoussam, on January 25, 2025. (AFP)

Composed of both French and Cameroonian historians, the 14-person committee looked into France’s role in the country between 1945 and 1971 based on declassified archives, eyewitness accounts and field surveys.
Most of Cameroon came under French rule in 1918 after its previous colonial ruler, Germany, was defeated during World War I.
But a brutal conflict unfolded when the country began pushing for its independence following World War II, a move France violently repressed, according to the report’s findings.
Between 1956 and 1961, France’s fight against Cameroonian independence claimed “tens of thousands of lives” and left hundreds of thousands displaced, the historians said.
“It is undeniable that this violence was extreme because it violated human rights and the laws of war,” it said.
For many in France, the war in Cameroon went unnoticed because it mainly involved troops from colonies in Africa and was overshadowed by the French fight in Algeria’s 1954-1962 war of independence.
“But this invisibility should not create an illusion. France was indeed waging war in Cameroon,” the report said.
The formerly British Cameroons to the south gained independence from the United Kingdom in 1961 and became part of the newly independent state.

While the study aims to fill France’s “memory gap” on this period, for Cameroonians, “the profound trauma linked to repression remains,” it said.
The report comes as France has seen its influence wane among its former African colonies, which are reevaluating — and sometimes severing — their ties with Paris.
Even after Cameroon gained independence in 1960, Paris remained deeply involved in its governance, working closely with the “authoritarian and autocratic” regime of Ahmadou Ahidjo, who stayed in power until 1982.
France helped draft Cameroon’s post-independence constitution and defense agreements allowed French troops to “maintain order” in the newly independent state.
Ahidjo’s successor, current President Paul Biya, 91, in office since 1982, is only the second president in Cameroon’s history.
Receiving the report in Yaounde on Tuesday, Biya called it a “work of collective therapy” that would encourage the peoples of both countries to better accept their past relationship.
Ahead of its publication, former anti-colonial fighter Mathieu Njassep had told AFP he wanted France to admit to wrongdoing.
“If France does not recognize it was wrong, we won’t be able to forgive it,” said the 86-year-old who fought against Ahidjo’s government from 1960 and was thrown in jail for 14 years for “armed rebellion.”

Macron has taken tentative steps to come to terms with once-taboo aspects of the country’s historical record, though many argue he has not gone far enough.
A 2021 report concluded France bore “overwhelming responsibilities” in the 1994 Rwandan genocide, and a 2020 review examining France’s actions during Algeria’s war of independence called for a “truth commission” and other conciliatory actions.
But Macron has ruled out an official apology for torture and other abuses carried out by French troops in Algeria.
France is now reconfiguring its military presence in Africa after being driven out of three countries in the Sahel governed by juntas hostile to Paris — Mali, Burkina Faso and Niger.
And Chad accused Macron of showing contempt after he said African leaders had “forgotten to say thank you” to France for helping to combat jihadist insurgencies in the Sahel.
Last week Macron said he was committed to “continuing the work of remembrance and truth initiated with Cameroon” after receiving the report.


Christians in Bangladesh alarmed after bomb attacks

Updated 5 sec ago

Christians in Bangladesh alarmed after bomb attacks

Christians in Bangladesh alarmed after bomb attacks
DHAKA: Fear has gripped Bangladesh’s tiny Christian minority after three crude bomb attacks on churches and a Catholic school, which police on Sunday said caused no injuries but were “certainly” designed to sow terror.
No group has claimed responsibility for the incidents or explained why the Christian community, which numbers around 500,000 people of the South Asian nation’s 170 million citizens, was targeted.
“We are trying to determine whether the incidents are connected or isolated — they are certainly aimed at terrifying people,” Dhaka police spokesman Muhammad Talebur Rahman told AFP.
Bangladesh has been in political turmoil since a deadly uprising toppled the autocratic government of Sheikh Hasina more than a year ago.
The recent attacks on Christian sites add to tensions as parties gear up for elections slated for February 2026.
A churchgoer said on Sunday there was an “eerie feeling” within the community.
“Anxiety grips many of us while going to church,” the 25-year-old university graduate said, asking not to be named.
The first attack took place on October 8, when a crude bomb was hurled at the capital’s oldest church, the Holy Rosary Catholic Church, established by the Portuguese in the 17th century.
Then, overnight Friday, attackers targeted two more Catholic sites — St. Mary’s Cathedral and St. Joseph’s School and College.
Nirmal Rozario, president of the Bangladesh Christian Association, said that the crude bomb exploded in front of St. Mary’s Cathedral, but that around 500 people came the next day to worship.
Rahman said attackers targeting the cathedral zoomed up on a motorbike, and “threw a crude bomb inside the school campus and fled.”
Brother Chandan Benedict Gomes, school principal at St. Jospeh’s, said that the attack had caused “anxiety” but that “classes were held as usual.”
Interim leader Muhammad Yunus, the 85-year-old Nobel Peace Prize winner serving as chief adviser, has repeatedly promised that the first elections since the uprising will be held in February as planned, despite violent incidents.
On November 5 major parties opened their campaigns, which turned violent almost immediately, with a shooting at a rally for the powerful Bangladesh National Party.
Bangladesh police this month also offered cash rewards for the surrender of more than 1,300 machine guns, rifles and pistols looted during last year’s uprising.