The
current Anglophone crisis has so far been a true test to see if the Oroko
(Ndian
division) politicians will fold into their usual docility again or rise
in a rare occasion to speak truth to power. Jackson Nanje
By Jackson W. Nanje |
For close to sixty (60)
years since the dawn of Cameroon’s independence in 1960/61 the Oroko politician
has never seen himself as a relevant partner in Cameroon’s body politic and
conversely, the way Cameroon politics is organized, it has hardly had any need
to include the Oroko politician in the national polity. One would think that with
the wealth coming out of the Oroko land (45% of Cameroon’s GDP which includes
85-5% of oil and natural gas revenue), it should have given the Oroko man the much-needed
leverage to be a viable political player in the nation. But no, the possession
of wealth in the division, which is always a difference maker elsewhere in the
world, has not made any difference to an Oroko politician or brought economic development
to their area of jurisdiction. Before we continue with this essay Nanje School
of Creative Thinking should define who is and Oroko man?
For historical and
geographical perspectives, let’s give a brief history of the Oroko people and
their locations on the map of Cameroon. Shortly after independence, the Oroko
people were lumped up in one division called the Kumba Division in the South
West Region. However, in 1967, considering how large the division was,
President Ahmadou Ahidjo decided to split Kumba division into two. This is how
Ndian and Meme divisions came into being. The composition of Ndian division has
129 villages (Oroko people), plus the Barombi people of Abor extraction (11
villages), Isangele, Kumbo Etindi, Idabato, Bamuso, Kumbo Abedimo, and the
newly acquired Bakassi Peninsula with villages totaling 146 with an estimated population
of more than 500,000 people. There are 88-verified Oroko villages in Meme division
(http://www.orokousa.org/clans-and-villages/),
making the Oroko tribe the largest assembly of tribal villages in the country. Despite
the portly size of the Oroko population, the Oroko politician is yet to deliver
anything major to any of its divisions. The two divisions (Ndian and Meme) are
the second and third largest of the six divisions in the South West Region
after Manyu division. However, with the inclusion of the Bakassi Peninsula,
Ndian division is arguably the largest division in the South West Region,
presently. This essay will emphasize more about Ndian division because most of
the wealth in the South West Region and Cameroon is from the division.
Ndian division does not
only possess 85.5% of Cameroon’s oil and natural gas; but possesses a huge
supply of cocoa, coffee, and timber. With the wealth that Ndian possesses one
would think that it will present the Ndian politicians a formidable platform to
lobby for substantial amount of money coming from proceeds of their resources
to bring some vitally-needed economic development for the division. The
docility of the current Ndian politicians is hereditary. For the more than
twenty Ndian parliamentarians (politicians) who have represented and are still
representing the people since the dawn of independence, just Chief Victor Ngomo
Obie-CNU (Ijowe), Honorable Nwalipenja Nkwelle Lobe-CNU-CPDM (Lipenja) and Hon.
Martin Mokube-CPDM (Bafaka Balue) have been true representatives of the people
due to most of their interventions. The rest have been hogwash who were and are
still being intimidated by their French-speaking colleagues in parliament,
especially the unshakeable Speaker of Cameroon Parliament, Djibril Cavayé.
The current Anglophone
crisis has so far been a true test to see if the Oroko (Ndian division)
politicians will fold into their usual docility again or rise in a rare
occasion to speak truth to power. In a unique occasion where the anglophones in
Cameroon are complaining of marginalization by their own French-speaking
Cameroon brothers with whom they signed the Foumban Accord to unite as equal
partners in the formation of the United Republic of Cameroon in1972, the Ndian
and Oroko politicians have been complete bystanders in this impasse. Even if
they become vocal as they are expected to, it would have been for genuine
reasons because their French-speaking counterpart have done so much wrong in
the dismantling of all known companies that flourished and brought prosperity to
the region in the past. Furthermore, the Oroko and Ndian politicians’ silence
have been so deafening even as they know that the South West Region has the economic
leverage because of the huge contribution they make to the nation’s overall
Gross Domestic Product (60%) and 45% of which comes from Ndian division. The
absolute lack of economic development activities for more than 50 years in the
division should urge our politicians to be vocal participants in this anglophone
crisis. Their unbelievable withdrawal from the struggle has been quite
unimageable and a spectacle to behold because there are no roads, no hospitals,
no electricity in the entire division, no communication network like radio,
television and internet and no banking facilities. The division is equally infested
with substandard schools which have been created without funding with many of
its teachers and administrators that were posted to schools in the region
refusing to honor the government’s transfer requests and as usual, the Oroko
and Ndian politicians are unconcerned about the decaying problem. The division
is completely disconnected from Cameroon mainland because of the absence of
these amenities and yet, the voters and the only three miserable Ndian
parliamentarians continue to vote 100% in favor of the Cameroon People’s
Democratic Movement (CPDM) party, oblivious of their demise and for fear of the heavy-handedness from the
Speaker. On one side, these Oroko politicians who, in the most part, are
myrmidons to the CPDM-led government shall be confronted henceforth by an
increasingly angry constituent who elected them into office with the hope that
they will deliver for them, but have rather decided to serve the government to
their detriment.
The question that has
always baffled the investigators of Nanje School of Creative Thinking about
politics of Ndian division is whether the Ndian politicians are to blame for
the misgivings of the division or the voters who, after more than 50years of
politicking continue to vote into office same party politicians who cannot deliver
for them or do not serve their interest? These are the politicians who have
served the Ndian people in the past: Chief
Victor Ngomo Obie-CNU (Ijowe), Hon.
Mbile Namaso-CNU (Lipenja Batanga), Hon.
Okha Bau-CNU (Lobe Town), Hon. Gabriel
Etongo-CNU (Bamuso), Hon. William
Ebeku-Bisoro Balue(CPDM), Hon.
Joshua Nambangi Osih-Madie Ngolo (SDF), Hon. Nwalipenja Nkwelle-Lobe-CNU-CPDM, Hon. Sylvester Itoe Imbia-CPDM (Dikome Balue), Ebune Nakeli-CPDM (Mundemba), Hon.
Besingi-(UNDP), Hon. Mosaki-CPDM, Hon.
Nobert Nangia Mbile-CPDM (Lipenja Batanga), Hon. Benedict Namongo-CPDM (Bamuso), Hon. Peter Mokube-UNDP (Dikome
Balue). The following three
representatives of the people shall be up for re-election in 2020: Honorable Peter Njume who represents
the 27 Balue villages, 11 Barombi villages and 15 Balondo ba Nanga villages; Honorable Daniel Ngalle Etongo who
represents only Bamuso district; and, Honorable
Mary Meboka who represents 36
Ngolo villages, 26 Ngolo Batanga villages, 19 Bima villages, 3 Balondo ba Diko
villages, Kumbo Etindi, Kumbo Abedimo, 3 Bakoko villages and Isangele. The next
election must signal the beginning for the newly-informed Ndian voters to start
taking a hard look at candidates who intend to run for office whether they are
qualified to be good servants of the people. Equally, the people must react
against any candidate imposed on them without their approval like it is often
the case.
After studying the
sphere of influence of each of these three parliamentarians, we have concluded
that there is a need for at least four (4) additional Members of Parliament
(MP) to be awarded to Ndian division because the few MPs that we currently have
cannot possibly cover the large topography and represent their people
effectively especially as the transport network system in the division is
extremely deplorable. In addition to the four more MPs, Ndian needs two more
Senators not just one as is presently the situation. There should be no reason
why Fako, which is one of the smallest divisions in terms of size and
population in the South West Region to have three Senators and Ndian just one
and the Ndian politicians are happy about this designation. These injustices
must be corrected by our docile MPs. Secondly, besides being naïve in
expressing the needs of their constituencies in parliament, the large expanse
of land has proven to be ungovernable by the expressionless MPs of Ndian
division. This issue of naivety is one of the problems the Ndian electorate
must correct in subsequent elections. Thirdly, there is a need for an
enlightened electorate to vote for qualified individuals who are required to
know the problems of the division. The quest to elect people because we ‘like
them’ should be an issue of the past. Qualifications and not love should be the
crowning jewel of an educated Ndian voter. Finally, the voters and the
candidates for MP must come to terms with the realities of the division by
drawing a Social Contract, like
that drawn by Jean Jacques Rousseau (a French Philosopher) in 1754. This Social
Contract must contain the Needs of Ndian division which, the MP candidate must
sign as a prerequisite to be voted into office. And if 50%-75% of the items on
the Social Contract are accomplished s/he shall be retained in office. But if
they cannot fulfill a greater majority of the items on the Social Contract we
cannot, in no practical terms re-elect them. We cannot continue to elect
individuals who do not have the priorities of the Ndian and Oroko people at
heart, anymore.
In conclusion, it is
seemingly untenable for the current crop of Ndian and Oroko politicians to win
the trust of the people they were supposed to be serving because, for ten (10)
months since the advent of the anglophone crisis none of these elected politicians
have expressed their dismay, opposition or dissatisfaction to the current
political dispensation in Cameroon much to the mortification of the
constituents. Rather, they have been great bedfellows with the administration.
1 comment:
Good expose pls how did you calculate the number of Oroko villages to arrive at a total of 146?
Because I did my calculation and I got 202 villages as per your explanation of the villages
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