NEWS BY EMMANUEL OKOGBA
A
military court in Cameroon on Tuesday handed a life sentence to the head of the
country’s anglophone separatist movement, Julius Sisiku Ayuk Tabe, in a move
that analysts said could inflame the 22-month-old revolt.
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Julius Sisiku Ayuk Tabe
Ayuk
Tabe, a charismatic leader widely deemed as a moderate in the separatist
movement, was convicted with nine others of charges including “terrorism and
secession”, the state’s lawyer, Martin Luther Achet, told AFP. They were given
life terms.
The
sentences were confirmed by a lawyer for the separatists, Joseph Fru, who added
the 10 had also been fined 250 billion CFA francs ($422 million, 381 million
euros).
Fru
condemned what he called a “parody of justice” and said the defendants refused
to recognise the right of the military tribunal in Yaounde to try them. Their
lawyers have yet to say whether they will file an appeal.
Ayuk
Tabe, a 54-year-old computer engineer by training, is the first self-proclaimed
president of “Ambazonia” — a breakaway state declared in October 2017 in two
English-speaking regions of the central African country.
The
government responded with a military crackdown. Attacks by both sides have left
1,850 dead, according to the International Crisis Group (ICG) think tank, while
the UN says 530,000 people have fled their homes.
– Colonial legacy –
English-speakers
account for about a fifth of Cameroon’s population of 24 million, who are
majority French-speaking.
Anglophones
are mainly concentrated in two western areas, the Northwest Region and the
Southwest Region, that were incorporated into the French-speaking state after
the colonial era in Africa wound down six decades ago.
Anglophones
have chafed for years at perceived discrimination in education, law and
economic opportunities at the hands of the francophone majority.
Ayuk
Tabe is part of the political branch of the separatist group that supports
dialogue with 86-year-old President Paul Biya , who has been in power for 36
years.
But
the influence of moderates waned in 2017 as Biya rejected demands for autonomy
and radicals in the movement gained the ascendant.
– ‘Crisis to worsen’ –
In
January 2018, Ayuk Tabe was arrested with 46 other separatists in the Nigerian
capital Abuja.
They
were then handed over to Cameroon, and the trial of Ayuk Tabe and the nine
others began in late December. In March this year, the extradition was ruled
illegal by a Nigerian court.
In
late May, Ayuk Tabe said he was willing to take part in talks with the
government, provided this took place abroad and the government released all
people who had been detained since the start of the anglophone crisis.
But
Tuesday’s sentencing could crush any chance of dialogue, analysts said.
A
specialist at the ICG said the move “risks worsening the security situation in
the anglophone zone in the coming weeks.”
“It
could radicalise part of the separatists who had been seeing a sign of hope in
the fact that the leaders had not yet been sentenced.”
Cameroon’s
main opposition part, the Social Democratic Front (SDF), which is opposed to
anglophone secession, also said the sentence worsened the breakaway crisis.
“Ayuk
Tabe has much clout among anglophones. His sentencing will make the resolution
of this crisis more complicated,” its spokesman, Denis Nkenlemo, told AFP.
“This
decision is an act of provocation which once more proves that the government
isn’t ready for dialogue… and is driving us straight into the wall.”
The
unrest has crippled the economy of the Northwest and Southwest Regions and had
a knock-on effect across the country.
More
than one in six people in Cameroon — 4.3 million — need humanitarian aid, an
increase of 30 percent from 2018, according to UN aid officials.
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