Cameroons Unity: and The New Cameroon
An excerpt from a February 20, 1962 article in the Guardian Newspaper read "The unification of French-speaking Cameroun with the former British-administered Southern Cameroons is a 'unique experience' in Africa..."

The reunification of the two territories marked a milestone in the cause espoused by Cameroonian civic-nationalists to reunite the lands of the 1884-1916 former German colony of Kamerun that was partitioned by Britain and France following the defeat of Germany in the First World War. It was one step forward in realizing the dream of "THE NEW CAMEROON", even though Cameroonian nationalists who weaved the Ideal were being hounded by the French pacification forces, and despite the fact that France had successfully installed a puppet regime in French-speaking Cameroun under Ahmadou Ahidjo who set about implementing France's game plan, starting with the usurpation of the reunification program and giving it a bad name. Today the reunification project is getting sour, especially among Cameroonians from the former British Southern Cameroons.

That is why Cameroonians are asking themselves the question:

What is to be done to get rid of an anachronistic French-imposed system that is leaving the country stuck in underdevelopment, corruption, fraud, despondence, dictatorship, and division even as the rest of the world is forging ahead?

Janvier Tchouteu comes up with some succinct answers in this account that provide the guidelines to the ultimate Cameroonian Dream of the "NEW CAMEROUN" first espoused by Cameroon's civic-nationalists that were successfully eliminated, sidelined or undermined during sixty years of neocolonialism by France, the puppet Ahidjo regime it put in place in 1960 and its successor the current Biya regime that took over in 1982.

Today, Cameroon is at a crossroads. While it is now obvious that the French-imposed system is anachronistic and no longer sustainable and that the political establishment is prepared to drag the country into abyss than bow out of power, Cameroon also risks being torn apart by those who never cherished reunification---people who would like the territory of the former British Southern Cameroons to become a separate country. Both groups stand as obstacles to the "New Cameroon" and are delaying the country's journey to take its place as the nucleus of the emerging African Union.
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Cameroons Unity: and The New Cameroon
An excerpt from a February 20, 1962 article in the Guardian Newspaper read "The unification of French-speaking Cameroun with the former British-administered Southern Cameroons is a 'unique experience' in Africa..."

The reunification of the two territories marked a milestone in the cause espoused by Cameroonian civic-nationalists to reunite the lands of the 1884-1916 former German colony of Kamerun that was partitioned by Britain and France following the defeat of Germany in the First World War. It was one step forward in realizing the dream of "THE NEW CAMEROON", even though Cameroonian nationalists who weaved the Ideal were being hounded by the French pacification forces, and despite the fact that France had successfully installed a puppet regime in French-speaking Cameroun under Ahmadou Ahidjo who set about implementing France's game plan, starting with the usurpation of the reunification program and giving it a bad name. Today the reunification project is getting sour, especially among Cameroonians from the former British Southern Cameroons.

That is why Cameroonians are asking themselves the question:

What is to be done to get rid of an anachronistic French-imposed system that is leaving the country stuck in underdevelopment, corruption, fraud, despondence, dictatorship, and division even as the rest of the world is forging ahead?

Janvier Tchouteu comes up with some succinct answers in this account that provide the guidelines to the ultimate Cameroonian Dream of the "NEW CAMEROUN" first espoused by Cameroon's civic-nationalists that were successfully eliminated, sidelined or undermined during sixty years of neocolonialism by France, the puppet Ahidjo regime it put in place in 1960 and its successor the current Biya regime that took over in 1982.

Today, Cameroon is at a crossroads. While it is now obvious that the French-imposed system is anachronistic and no longer sustainable and that the political establishment is prepared to drag the country into abyss than bow out of power, Cameroon also risks being torn apart by those who never cherished reunification---people who would like the territory of the former British Southern Cameroons to become a separate country. Both groups stand as obstacles to the "New Cameroon" and are delaying the country's journey to take its place as the nucleus of the emerging African Union.
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Cameroons Unity: and The New Cameroon

Cameroons Unity: and The New Cameroon

by Janvier Tchouteu
Cameroons Unity: and The New Cameroon

Cameroons Unity: and The New Cameroon

by Janvier Tchouteu

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Overview

An excerpt from a February 20, 1962 article in the Guardian Newspaper read "The unification of French-speaking Cameroun with the former British-administered Southern Cameroons is a 'unique experience' in Africa..."

The reunification of the two territories marked a milestone in the cause espoused by Cameroonian civic-nationalists to reunite the lands of the 1884-1916 former German colony of Kamerun that was partitioned by Britain and France following the defeat of Germany in the First World War. It was one step forward in realizing the dream of "THE NEW CAMEROON", even though Cameroonian nationalists who weaved the Ideal were being hounded by the French pacification forces, and despite the fact that France had successfully installed a puppet regime in French-speaking Cameroun under Ahmadou Ahidjo who set about implementing France's game plan, starting with the usurpation of the reunification program and giving it a bad name. Today the reunification project is getting sour, especially among Cameroonians from the former British Southern Cameroons.

That is why Cameroonians are asking themselves the question:

What is to be done to get rid of an anachronistic French-imposed system that is leaving the country stuck in underdevelopment, corruption, fraud, despondence, dictatorship, and division even as the rest of the world is forging ahead?

Janvier Tchouteu comes up with some succinct answers in this account that provide the guidelines to the ultimate Cameroonian Dream of the "NEW CAMEROUN" first espoused by Cameroon's civic-nationalists that were successfully eliminated, sidelined or undermined during sixty years of neocolonialism by France, the puppet Ahidjo regime it put in place in 1960 and its successor the current Biya regime that took over in 1982.

Today, Cameroon is at a crossroads. While it is now obvious that the French-imposed system is anachronistic and no longer sustainable and that the political establishment is prepared to drag the country into abyss than bow out of power, Cameroon also risks being torn apart by those who never cherished reunification---people who would like the territory of the former British Southern Cameroons to become a separate country. Both groups stand as obstacles to the "New Cameroon" and are delaying the country's journey to take its place as the nucleus of the emerging African Union.

Product Details

BN ID: 2940161742105
Publisher: TISI BOOKS
Publication date: 09/26/2018
Sold by: Barnes & Noble
Format: eBook
File size: 1 MB

About the Author

Janvier Tchouteu, who grew up in the USA, The Netherlands, Russia and Cameroon, has written several bestselling novels including "Disciples of Fortune", "Triple Agent Double Cross", "Flash of the Sun", "The Union Moujik", and "The Girl on the Trail"; and the short story collections "The Usurper: and Other Stories", and "Me Before Them". He is the author of acclaimed works of non-fiction, including "THE CANARY IN A COAL MINE EFFECT: Recent Political Assassinations That Transformed Countries, Regions and the World", "Ukraine: The Tug-of-war between Russia and the West", "THEIR LAST STAND: Donald Trump's Upset Victory in the 2016 Presidential Election, How to Win Future Elections, and the Next Phase for America", "Cameroon: France's Dysfunctional Puppet System in Africa". He splits his time between the United States and Cameroon.
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