Cameroon, Next African Nation To Explode

Cameroon, Next African Nation To Explode

By Azore Opio with reports

There is a terrorism storm brewing in the north of Cameroon in a crowded field of social ills, and experts think these may crystallize into a time bomb that may explode any time soon if it is not defused quickly.

The experts at a recent international crisis meeting in Brussels expressed fears that Cameroon could be the next African nation in line to explode into chaos and violence.

At the meeting that held September 4, 2014 organised by the International Crisis Group, the experts observed that, “Cameroon’s apparent stability belies the variety of internal and external pressures threatening the country’s future. Without social and political change, a weakened Cameroon could become another flashpoint in the region.”

“Cameroon’s political establishment should put its disputes aside and agree on the fundamentals of what could be a post-Biya transition before it is too late,” said Thierry Vircoulon, Crisis Group’s Central Africa Project Director.

The International Crisis Group argues that Cameroon is weakened by social discontent and political deadlock.

“In the north and east, security forces struggle to keep at bay incursions by Nigeria’s Boko Haram and armed groups from the Central African Republic. With its security forces under pressure and tensions rising within the ruling party, the pillars of the regime have begun to crack,” the Group further states.

According to the Group, after 32 years into his reign, “President Paul Biya is giving no indication that this is his last term in office and no plans are in place to ensure a transition before or after the 2018 election.”

It argues that neither the opposition nor civil society is strong enough to foster social and political change.

In order to avoid turbulence and violent transition in the Central African country, the International Crisis Group observes that while relying on well-tried mechanisms to control the opposition, the regime bets on the population’s resilience.

“But in the face of high youth unemployment and corruption, social protests – so far limited – could turn into a violent uprising against the regime, led by an alienated younger generation,” says the Group.

To reduce the risk of violent transition, the Group recommends that Cameroonian authorities, and the opposition and civil society need to reopen dialogue, negotiate a political and institutional reform package and reach an agreement on a post-Biya transition, guaranteed by the African Union.

According to the Group, the agreement should include: Biya’s promise not to contest the 2018 presidential election in exchange for a guarantee that no legal actions will be undertaken against him and that he can retain his assets; new appointment mechanisms for the members of the Supreme Court, the Constitutional Council and the electoral commission to enhance their independence; introduction of age quotas to inject new blood into leadership structures and political parties; and primaries for all political parties before 2018.

“Cameroon needs a reality check,” says Hans Heungoup, Cameroon Analyst. “With growing militant threats at its borders, the country can no longer afford political uncertainty, institutional fragility and the disenfranchisement of its youth”.

“A badly managed succession could plunge Cameroon into a dangerous conflict and would prove detrimental for West and Central Africa by creating an axis of instability from north-east Nigeria to Central African Republic and South Sudan”, says Thierry Vircoulon, Central Africa Project Director. “Cameroon’s political establishment should put its disputes aside and agree on the fundamentals of what could be a post-Biya transition before it is too late.”