An Open Letter to the Secretary General of United Nations Organization

Dear Mr. Secretary General,

Protests by Palestine cannot Revoke Israel's Independence

Thanks for taking questions on the occasion of #UNGA72. Special thanks for
your kind consideration of the suggestions I offer below.

First, thank you for what you do for world peace and security. Kindly allow
me to draw your attention a new to the ongoing crisis in the Cameroons. The
United Nations holds the key to resolving this crisis. Surely the Secretary
General agrees that it would neither be justice nor promotion of world peace
if UNGA Resolution 181 (adopted thanks to 33 YES votes, 13 NO votes and 10
abstentions and resulting in effective independence for Israel) were to be
undermined because of Palestinian opposition to international sovereignty
for Israel. It is the failure of the United Nations to fully implement UNGA
Resolution 1608 (adopted thanks to 64 YES votes, 23 NO votes and 10
abstentions, granting independence to Southern Cameroons) that is at the
root cause of the crisis in the Cameroons. 

Second, when shall the United Nations do justice by Southern Cameroons and
resolve this crisis by tackling its root cause? The UN witnessed and
recorded the opposition of the Republic of Cameroon (which voted NO under
UNGA Resolution 1608, thereby voting both against Union with and
Independence for Southern Cameroons). Yet, the United Nations imposed a
"forced marriage" between what, then and now, are clearly unwilling and
unprepared couple. Or, did the UNGA merely mean to grant Independence to
Southern Cameroons with the right hand (under Resolution 1608) while taking
it back with the left? How does an abusive and more powerful neighboring
country like the Republic of Cameroon accommodate an independent Southern
Cameroons whose Independence the former voted to deny? Could the United
Nations guarantee the independence of Kuwait by trusting Iraq to take care?

Third, you would agree, I hope, that by proceeding as outlined above the
United Nations merely violated Article 76(b) of its Charter which reaffirms
independence as the inherent and inalienable right of all colonies and Trust
Territories (including Southern Cameroons). Why is the United Nations
avoiding to address the non existence of a union treaty between the Republic
of Cameroon and Southern Cameroons as laid out under Articles 102 and 103 of
the United Nations Charter?

Fourth, why is the United Nations holding back from evoking so many of its
own Resolutions; why is it not evoking Article 4(b) of the African Union
Constitutive Act on the sanctity of borders inherited from Colonialism to
rule that the borders of the Republic of Cameroon were frozen when it
achieved independence on 1st January 1960? Why is the UN unable to evoke its
own Resolutions and International Law to remind the Republic of Cameroon
that colonialism and, obviously, recolonization are crimes against humanity?
Why is the United Nations not evoking Principles VII, VIII & IX of UNGA
Resolution 1541 to help deal with the ongoing crisis in the Cameroons?

Fifth, could I kindly ask the Secretary General to, please, put himself in
the shoes of Southern Cameroonians today. Growing up or living in his native
Portugal, could the Secretary General consider his country independent and
his people sovereign or self-governing if he and his people, among other
things, were under brutish rule by a police force, a gendarmerie, an army,
and an administration (at all levels: region, province, town, hamlet and
village) which speaks the English language for example instead of the
language of your people (Portuguese)? This is the yoke the United Nations
put on Southern Cameroons by failing to hand over the instruments of
sovereignty (independence) to the people of Southern Cameroons.

Sixth, would the Secretary General consider Portugal independent if the
legal system used in your homeland was coming from a neighboring country; if
it was inspired by the French system, not the law the Portuguese people use?
If Portuguese political leaders, trade unionists, lawyers, teachers,
journalists, activists and ordinary citizens (all of them civilians) were to
be abducted from Portugal, deported to France, for example, and forced to go
through torture, detention, awaiting trial and trial before military
tribunals using the French language, not Portuguese? Or, if young Portuguese
people went to primary and secondary school in Portuguese but had to do
university education in English?

Seventh, would the Secretary General's mother, brother or sister still
consider their country independent instead of being under colonial
administration and military occupation by a foreign dominating force if the
official language of Portugal (Portuguese) was bypassed in official
documents, in currency, on road signs, etc. in favor of French, for example,
which also happens to be the language of the neighboring country? Would they
call Portugal independent if their president and senior government officials
spoke English, instead of Portuguese; if they had no choice but to consult
with a medical doctor or nurse at Government hospital who spoke English, not
Portuguese? If they could only make a case before the judicial police of
their country by using French, instead of Portuguese? If nearly six decades
of history have proven beyond any doubt that Southern Cameroonians are only
second class citizens of the country the colonizing power wants them to
believe is also theirs? 

I could go on, but I am sure that the SG gets my drift and, hopefully,
understands the kind of linguistic apartheid, economic, cultural and
political domination that the colonial government of the Republic of
Cameroon has imposed on Southern Cameroons for 56+ years. Our people have
been patient these many decades, hoping and working in good faith to make
whatever union is claimed to work. However, and as with Nigeria over the 44
years which came to an end when our representatives walked out of the
Eastern House of Assembly in 1953, our people have come to one more than
obvious conclusion: this God forsaken union or whatever it is called will
never work.

I am writing, therefore, to add my voice to the millions of Southern
Cameroonians who are appealing to the United Nations and the African Union
to recognize that the illegal occupation of Southern Cameroons is similar,
in many ways, to the illegal occupation of East Timor by Indonesia. 

One fact the Republic of Cameroon is not sharing with the world is this:
Yaounde seceded from whatever union it wants to claim existed between it and
Buea when it unilaterally reverted in April 1984 to the name it had
inherited from colonization on the 1st of January 1960; a full year and nine
months before the independence of Southern Cameroons was supposed to be
effective on 1st October 1961.

Please, do not listen to those offering what is an unsustainable solution in
the form of decentralization or federalism. After 56 years of experimenting
with this so-called union, it is important to recognize that even the
solution of a union of two states, equal in status, initially pledged by
Yaounde and envisaged by the UN, is impossible to implement. Equal in status
to Yaounde really means, as our people have rightly argued all along -
quietly, at first, but very loudly since last year - "two states, equal in
status" means that not only Yaounde but also Buea flies its own flag, runs
its own government, runs its own diplomacy, has its own seat at the United
Nations and the African Union, runs its own administration, hires, trains
and manages its own security forces and army, etc. As I am sure the
Secretary General will agree, such an arrangement can only be possible if
the independence of Southern Cameroons (obtained under UNGA Resolution 1608)
is recognized, ful ly implemented and guaranteed.

The argument put forward by Yaounde that Southern Cameroons used to be a
part of the former German Kamerun is an attempt at masking expansionism.
More countries than Southern Cameroons were part of that German Kamerun.
Shall Yaounde annex other countries once it is successful with Southern
Cameroons? If the United Nations will not allow such expansionism, then why
make Southern Cameroons the sacrificial lamb? Who is the United Nations
appeasing? Would that be different from the appeasement which failed to
satisfy the expansionist tendencies of Adolf Hitler? Should we expect the
Republic of Cameroon to claim Northern Cameroons next? Besides, and even
granting Southern Cameroons was a part of the Republic of Cameroon, are we
the first country to gain independence from an existing country? So many
independent countries were once part of another country. The USA was once
part of the British Empire. South Sudan was once part of Sudan. Eritrea was
once part of Ethiopia. Angola, Moz ambique and Guinea Bissau were once part
of Portugal.

What is clear, Mr. Secretary General, is that the Sovereign People of
Southern Cameroons today overwhelming reject all the unsustainable solutions
of the past. We seek a meaningful solution to the crimes of annexation,
illegal military occupation and abusive colonial rule by the Republic of
Cameroon. And you, Mr. Secretary General, are in a unique place in history
to render justice to Southern Cameroons. The hard work has been done
already. UNGA to Resolution 1608 is already on the books. All what the UNGA
has to do is to seat Southern Cameroons as a full Member State of the United
Nations once its Sovereign People elect a government of their own. The fact
that our independence is contested and challenged by the Republic of
Cameroon should not cause the UN to revisit the matter as this would be
responding to the colonial whims and annexationist caprices of the Republic
of Cameroon. 

Rather, the UN should reaffirm that no country has had to vote for or obtain
independence twice. When it was time for The Gambia to break away from the
SeneGambia Confederacy, Banjul did not have to organize another referendum
for independence and neither the UN Security Council nor its General
Assembly have to vote anew. The United Nations should reaffirm that Southern
Cameroons can only be part of the Republic of Cameroon if they obtained
independence together. Of Southern Cameroons, as Yaounde claims, is only two
of the ten regions of the Republic of Cameroon, can Yaounde show which other
two regions obtained a vote for independence separately from Yaounde? Which
other country had regions of it seek and obtain independence separately? 

The people of Southern Cameroons place their trust in the ability of the
United Nations to uphold justice and to defend its own Resolutions. We rest
our hope in the United Nations doing for Southern Cameroons what it has done
in defense of the independence of Israel despite many decades of protests,
contestation and even wars waged by the Palestinian people and parts of the
Arab World to subvert it. UNGA Resolution 181 has the same force as UNGA
Resolution 1608, unless the United Nations is sending a loud message to all
the peoples of the United Nations that all peoples are equal, but some
people are more equal than others.

Most respectfully,

Ntumfoyn Boh Herbert (Yindo Toh)
Spokesperson, Movement for the Restoration of the Independence of Southern
Cameroons (MoRISC)
On the web at www.morisc.org <http://www.morisc.org> 
Email: spokesper...@morisc.org <mailto:spokesper...@morisc.org> 

 

EM

On the 49th Parallel          

                 Thé Mulindwas Communication Group
"With Yoweri Museveni, Ssabassajja and Dr. Kiiza Besigye, Uganda is in
anarchy"
                    Kuungana Mulindwa Mawasiliano Kikundi
"Pamoja na Yoweri Museveni, Ssabassajja na Dk. Kiiza Besigye, Uganda ni
katika machafuko" 

 

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