Foreign policy is going to play a lot in the upcoming presidential race in the USA. And the candidates cannot and should not be allowed to be evasive about the rogue heads of state supported in foreign countries by the big powers, dictators that impoverish and oppress and suppress their people.
The current geopolitical turmoil in the world and efforts by the major powers to determine geopolitical developments ignore or pay very little attention to Africa, which is going to be the major flashpoint in the near future as China creeps in even further and becomes entrenched. The African people who relate more with the West, are being constrained to operate under dictatorships, authoritarianism and totalitarianism, which are anti-people systems headed by puppets who are being supported by foreign powers. Most of these evil anti-people African puppet heads of state and their ruling anti-democratic classes find in China's limited democracy and translucent way of doing business a comfortable partner to deal with.
So it is about time the United States of America starts dissociating itself from France's anti-people policies in Africa, or starts advising France to let go of its century old stranglehold over francophone African countries where France put in place retrogressive puppets whose connivance and misrule are impoverishing the citizens of these African countries. A good example is Cameroon, a country with a history as the base where following the defeat and occupation of France in 1940 by Nazi Germany, the Free France under the leadership of General Charles De Gaulle who had escaped to the UK, recruited locals who formed the core of the Free French Forces that went on to liberate French Equatorial Africa, rid Koufra in Libya of Italian control, stalled the German and Italian Armies in Bir Hakeim in North Africa, liberated Paris and the rest of France.
These Cameroonian fighters returned home after the war, formed a political party (Union of the Populations of the Cameroons) and asked for reunification of British Cameroons and French Cameroun, and independence, garnering 80% of popular support and 90% of the intellectuals, but France banned the party in 1955, calling it communist, killed all its leaders (Um Nyobe 1958, Felix Moumie 1960 in Geneva, Ossende Afana, Ernest Ouandie etc.) and installed a 6th grader Ahmadou Ahidjo, as head of state of French Cameroun, and then granted him power in 1960, setting up a corrupt system that Ahidjo was a custodian of until 1982, when he was told by the then French President Francois Mitterrand to hand over power to his prime minister from 1972 Paul Biya. Paul Biya has been in power since then. These French-imposed systems abound in Africa, and they need to be dismantled because their opaqueness, corruption, mafia-styles and other retrogressive aspects leave them vulnerable to opaque interests, among which are certain Chinese economic ventures in Africa, as well as the activities of some foreign governments, international corporations and individuals.
The current geopolitical turmoil in the world and efforts by the major powers to determine geopolitical developments ignore or pay very little attention to Africa, which is going to be the major flashpoint in the near future as China creeps in even further and becomes entrenched. The African people who relate more with the West, are being constrained to operate under dictatorships, authoritarianism and totalitarianism, which are anti-people systems headed by puppets who are being supported by foreign powers. Most of these evil anti-people African puppet heads of state and their ruling anti-democratic classes find in China's limited democracy and translucent way of doing business a comfortable partner to deal with.
So it is about time the United States of America starts dissociating itself from France's anti-people policies in Africa, or starts advising France to let go of its century old stranglehold over francophone African countries where France put in place retrogressive puppets whose connivance and misrule are impoverishing the citizens of these African countries. A good example is Cameroon, a country with a history as the base where following the defeat and occupation of France in 1940 by Nazi Germany, the Free France under the leadership of General Charles De Gaulle who had escaped to the UK, recruited locals who formed the core of the Free French Forces that went on to liberate French Equatorial Africa, rid Koufra in Libya of Italian control, stalled the German and Italian Armies in Bir Hakeim in North Africa, liberated Paris and the rest of France.
These Cameroonian fighters returned home after the war, formed a political party (Union of the Populations of the Cameroons) and asked for reunification of British Cameroons and French Cameroun, and independence, garnering 80% of popular support and 90% of the intellectuals, but France banned the party in 1955, calling it communist, killed all its leaders (Um Nyobe 1958, Felix Moumie 1960 in Geneva, Ossende Afana, Ernest Ouandie etc.) and installed a 6th grader Ahmadou Ahidjo, as head of state of French Cameroun, and then granted him power in 1960, setting up a corrupt system that Ahidjo was a custodian of until 1982, when he was told by the then French President Francois Mitterrand to hand over power to his prime minister from 1972 Paul Biya. Paul Biya has been in power since then. These French-imposed systems abound in Africa, and they need to be dismantled because their opaqueness, corruption, mafia-styles and other retrogressive aspects leave them vulnerable to opaque interests, among which are certain Chinese economic ventures in Africa, as well as the activities of some foreign governments, international corporations and individuals.
There is a short window for genuine democratic change in African countries like Cameroon before they become failed states that lack a sense of direction and that are epitomized by a complete disconnect between the custodians of the system (political establishment) and the people, where there is a complete institutionalization of mediocrity and a prevalence of mediocracies in the African continent.
The Union Moujik
Ukraine: The Tug-of-war between Russia and the West
by Janvier T. Chando, Tisi Books, et al.
The Girl on the Trail
by Janvier Chouteu-Chando
No comments:
Post a Comment