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| Survivor: Odile Mbouma says she saw dozens of people slaughtered by French troops who were hunting for Cameroonian independence fighters (AFP Photo) |
Ekité (Cameroon) (AFP) - It was a "dirty war" waged by French colonial troops but it never made headlines and even today goes untold in school history books.
The brutal
conflict unfolded in Cameroon, which on January 1 marks its 60th anniversary of
independence -- the first of 17 African countries that became free from their
colonial masters in 1960.
Many
decades on, those who witnessed the violence recall events that shaped
countless lives in the central African country yet remain unchronicled today.
"My
life was overturned," Odile Mbouma, 72, said in the southwestern town of
Ekite.
On the
night of December 30, 1956, French troops arrived in the town and slaughtered
dozens of people, perhaps as many as a hundred, she said.
"We
were sitting under a tree when we suddenly heard the crackle of gunfire,"
she said. "It was everyone for themselves."
Taking to
her heels, the seven-year-old found herself jumping over bodies. "They
were everywhere."
The troops
were looking for independence fighters -- members of the Union of the Peoples
of Cameroon (UPC), a nationalist movement established in 1948 that faced
repression first by the French and later by Cameroonian soldiers.
French
authorities labelled the UPC "communist" and cracked down from 1955,
driving the movement underground, though its charismatic founder Ruben Um Nyobe
preached non-violence.
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Benoit
Bassemel was aged seven when his father was
killed in the December 31 1956
massacre (AFP Photo)
|
Buried in
cement
In
September 1958, Um Nyobe -- nicknamed Mpodol (for "he who brings the
word" in the Bassa language) -- was killed by French troops.
"His
body was dragged around and displayed so that everybody (saw the corpse) of a
man who was considered immortal," said Louis Marie Mang, UPC activist in
Eseka, where Um Nyobe is buried in a Protestant graveyard.
"To
prevent traditional rites from being held, he was put in a block of cement and
buried (without) a coffin."
The
conflict continued long beyond independence, for repression of the nationalists
continued under Cameroon's first president, Ahmadou Ahidjo, who also banned
public references to the UPC and to Um Nyobe.
The
violence "passed unnoticed, wiped from memories," according to Thomas
Deltombe, Manuel Domergue and Jacob Tatsitsa, authors of "La guerre du
Cameroun" ("Cameroon's War"), published in 2016.
They
estimate that between 1955 and 1964, tens of thousands of people, including
civilians as well as UPC members, were killed.
In Ekite, a
wreath of flowers lies on the soil of a scrubland field at the end of a dirt
track. "The Nation will remember your sacrifice," says a memorial
notice.
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Louis Marie
Mang, a UPC activist, stands before the tomb of anti-colonialist leader
Ruben
Um Nyobe (AFP Photo)
|
"This
is one of the mass graves where the nationalists were buried," said
Jean-Louis Kell, a UPC militant.
A second
ditch was apparent a dozen metres (yards) away, and "a third was
discovered not long ago," said Benoit Bassemel. He was seven during the
French massacre and has tears in his eyes when he tells how his father was
murdered.
'Free
like the others'
UPC
nationalists believe that the independence granted on January 1, 1960 was not
what they fought for.
They view
the country's two post-independence presidents, Ahidjo and Paul Biya, who has
been in office since 1982, as working hand-in-hand with France.
"We
wanted to be free like the other countries. We no longer wanted white people to
subjugate us," said 80-year-old Mathieu Njassep, in his tiny family
apartment in Petit Paris, a poor district of Douala, the economic capital.
In 1960,
aged 21, Njassep joined the Cameroon National Liberation Army (ALNK), the UPC's
armed wing.
After two
years of fighting, he was appointed secretary to Ernest Ouandie, a leading
figure in the movement. He was sentenced to death but escaped the firing squad,
unlike Ouandie, who was executed in 1971.
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A farewell
to arms: Former independence fighter Mathieu Njassep (AFP Photo)
|
"We
had almost nothing to wage a war with," Njassep said.
"We
carried out ambushes" with machetes, sticks and homemade guns. "If we
had had enough weapons, we would have beaten them."
At the
time, the ALNK had established its headquarters in the village of Bandenkop, on
the land of the main western tribal group, the Bamileke. Fighting was fierce
between the nationalists and the French army.
In the
rugged valley from which ALNK commanders led operations, there is no sign of
human life today and the only sound is that of a bubbling stream.
"This
whole zone was regularly bombed" by the French air force, said Michel
Eclador Pekoua, a former UPC official.
Pekoua and
other nationalists say French planes dropped napalm. France has neither
confirmed nor denied the use of the notorious incendiary weapon.
Decapitations
On a road
30 kilometres (19 miles) to the north, in Bafoussam, a roundabout is known as
the "crossroads of the guerrillas," for it was where the decapitated
heads of nationalists were placed on show, said Theophile Nono, head of a
historical association, Memoire 60.
The
regime's methods "ranged from the arrest and arbitrary imprisonment of any
Cameroonian suspected of 'rebellion' to systematic torture, with extrajudicial
summary executions," Nono said.
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A statue of
Ruben Um Nyobe has been erected in Eseka to commemorate
his part in Cameroon's
independence (AFP Photo)
|
For many
years the conflict mostly remained taboo in Cameroon. It was in the 1990s, when
the authorities came under mounting pressure for democratic change, that people
began to raise the historic past.
Biya, in a
speech in 2010, paid tribute to "people who dreamed of (independence),
fought to obtain it and sacrificed their lives for it... Our people should be
eternally grateful to them."
After years
of French silence, then president Francois Hollande in 2015 became his
country's first head of state to speak of "a repression" of
Cameroonian nationalists leading to "tragic episodes".
For many
survivors, this is not enough.
"France
must accept its responsibility," Nono said.
"It
must undertake to compensate victims of the dirty war, which has been carefully
concealed by both the French side and the Cameroonian side."





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