Sunday, March 16, 2014

Lapiro de Mbanga – Iconic Cameroonian Artist, Civil Rights leader and Advocate for Change has passed away

Originally published by Freemuse
"“He who has a why to live for can bear almost any how.”FRIEDRICH NIETZSCHE

"Lapiro de Mbanga lived his larger than life purpose for Cameroon. He exposed the evil French-imposed system and the evil Biya regime in a way that few Cameroonians ever did. And he paid dearly for that.The ultimate purpose of the NEW CAMEROON is now in the hands of Cameroonians to complete.RIP!!!!" 
JANVIER TCHOUTEU-CHANDO



The article below was originally published by Freemuse  http://freemuse.org/archives/7330


Freemuse
Originally published by Freemuse
Originally published by Freemus
Singer and musician Lapiro de Mbanga from Cameroon – the “unceremonial sheriff of the backyards” – has died, 56 years old.
Lapiro_nov2009_590
By Freemuse
Lapiro de Mbanga was a musical “freedom fighter” who articulated the daily injustices he witnessed in his songs – and was punished hard for his right to express them.


On 16 March 2014, Lapiro de Mbanga died of cancer in USA, the country which gave him asylum in 2012 at a time when he had to leave Cameroon under dramatic circumstances.


“Authorities in Cameroon continued to harass and threaten Lapiro even after he was released. He needed to get out of the country, and we needed to find an urgent solution,” told Freemuse Director Ole Reitov. With the help of Freedom Now, Lapiro was given refugee asylum in the United States.
“Lapiro said that Freemuse ‘saved his life’. He often told us that he ‘was ready to die’, but we never felt we were ready to loose him,” said Ole Reitov. “His songs will never die. He will always be remembered as ‘the people’s voice’ against corruption and power abuse.”


A few hours after his death, newspapers in Cameroon described his death as “a huge loss to Cameroonian music.”


Three years in prison
Freemuse in collaboration with International Pen started campaigning for the release of Lapiro in 2008, but on 9 September 2009, Lapiro was sentenced three years imprisonment and ordered to pay a fine of 280 million CFA francs (640,000 US dollars) as compensation for damage caused during riots where protesters had taken to the streets, angered by high living costs and a constitutional change that would allow the country’s president to stay in power indefinitely.


Lapiro’s crime allegedly was that the amid nationwide strikes and mass demonstrations in 2008, he had composed and recorded the song ‘Constitution Constipée’, (Constipated Constitution), in which he describes the country’s president, Paul Biya, as “caught in the trap of networks that oblige him to stay in power even though he is tired.” The song became an unofficial anthem of the protests, and Lapiro was arrested and charged of inciting youth unrest.


“My struggle has always been to denounce inequalities, and danger is part of that mission,” said Lapiro de Mbanga when he was interviewed in 2010 during his unfair imprisonment where he shared a cell with 50 other prisoners.


Left: Ole Reitov and Marie Korpe. Right: Lapiro, Martin Buhl Larsen and Lapiro's wife Louisette
Left: Ole Reitov and Marie Korpe from Freemuse received the Freedom to Create Prize on behalf of Lapiro who was
in prison. Right: After his realease, the award is handed over to Lapiro in Cameroon by Martin Buhl Larsen
from Freemuse. Lapiro’s wife Louisette is seen at the right.


Global award
In 2009, Freemuse nominated Lapiro for the Freedom to Create Award, and in November 2009 at a ceremony in London, Freemuse received the award on the behalf of Lapiro – ‘The Freedom to Create Imprisoned Artist Prize’. The jury panel, which included renowned conductor Daniel Barenboim, argued that “his songs constitute a cultural megaphone by which the disenfranchised and politically endangered can vicariously exercise free speech.”
The news was conveyed to Lapiro in his prison cell in Cameroon a few hours before the prize ceremony took place Wednesday evening at London’s Victoria and Albert Museum in attendance of international luminaries such as the celebrated Iranian filmmaker Mohsen Makhmalbaf, Time Out founder Tony Elliot and Human rights activist Bianca Jagger.
A month later, Lapiro contracted typhoid fever and nearly died of that disorder and respiratory complications. In addition to Freemuse’s world-wide campaign for his release, Mondomix compiled a CD in support of Lapiro and campaigned actively in France for his release, the U.S.-based lawyers’ organization Freedom Now monitored Mbanga’s case throughout his incarceration, and in April 2010, the Writers in Prison Committee of International PEN also launched a campaign to help win Mbanga’s freedom.
In 2011, the United Nations Working Group on Arbitrary Detention declared that Mbanga’s arrest was an infringement of the International Covenant on Civil and Political Rights. He was released from prison on 8 April 2011, one day before the official end of his sentence.


Long list of biting texts
Already one year leater, Lapiro surprised the Cameroon government with the release of yet another anti-Biya music album calling on the president to resign, ‘Demissionnez’.
In September 2012, Mbanga, his wife, and five of their six children left Cameroon for the United States, where they had been granted asylum after receiving threats on this life. His exile was described by one newspaper as a major loss for the Cameroonian music scene.
Lapiro de Mbanga – his real name was Lambo Sandjo Pierre Roger – composed and recorded what Index on Censorship has described as “a long list of biting texts on the socio-economic realities in his beleaguered country.”
His hit songs during the 1980s and 1990s were regularly censored by the Cameroonian government, and he was seen as a spokesman for the youth of his country, using the power of popular music to campaign for social reforms in his native Cameroon during three decades.
Since 2010, a book detailing Mbanga’s trial and the reasons for his exile (Cabale Politico-Judiciaire Ou La Mort Programmée D’Un Combatant De La Liberté) has been said to be “due for release soon”.
Cameroon has still not paid compensation to Lapiro and his family.



The first interview with musician Lapiro de Mbanga after he was released from prison after three years imprisonment. Recorded on 8 May 2011 and posted on youtube.com.
» Read more on: www.freemuse.org/archives/5009



25 November 2009:
Lapiro de Mbanga wins global award
One song — three years imprisonment. Global award to the singer that the President of Cameroon fears for voicing peoples frustrations. Imprisoned musician Lapiro de Mbango is the 2009-winner of the ‘Freedom to Create’ Imprisoned Artist Prize.
» www.freemuse.org/archives/1525


» MP3s on Amazon: www.amazon.com/Lapiro-De-Mbanga




Photos of Lapiro de Mbanga in high resolution

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Lapiro de Mbanga
, out of prison, April 2011.
Photo by Jen Bell.
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Lapiro de Mbanga
, at home with friends and fans, 9 April 2011.
Photo by Théodore Tchopa / Le Jour.

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Lapiro de Mbanga
 in court room on 25 June 2009.
Photo by Jen Bell
  Size 22 x 16 cm in 300 d.p.i. – 2.0 MB

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Lapiro de Mbanga
 being escorted by the major of Njombé Penja, Mr. Kingué. on 24 July 2008.
Photo courtesy by Issa Nyaphaga
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Lapiro de Mbanga
, in prison, November 2009.
Photo by Jen Bell.
  Size 17 x 22 cm in 300 d.p.i. – 2.4 MB

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