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Globalization and politics

Mona Silavi
project manager
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piqer: Mona Silavi
Friday, 03 August 2018

Ambazonia Via Cameroon; Colonial Languages Divided a Nation

"Ambazonian people" is how the inhabitants of the south of Cameroon refer to themselves. The name “Ambazonia” is derived from the location of this territory in the Ambas Bay area within the Gulf of Guinea.

What divides this part of Cameroon from the rest of it is the English language, in contrast to the largely French-speaking Yaoundé-based Cameroun.

After the process of the decolonization, French continues to be the sole administrative language and the positions of power are dominated by Francophones on the federal level.

Many in the Anglophone community feel marginalised by the French-speaking government in Yaounde, citing a lack of political representation, job opportunities and resources and the imposition of French in schools, official documents and courts.

After years of assimilationist policies against Anglophones from Francophones, Ambazonia is currently at its worst crisis between government forces and Ambazonian civil society, with numerous disproportionate security measures of force.

Tensions rose in late 2016 with a strike by barristers and then teachers, both of whom were protesting against the use of French in schools and courts in Cameroon's English-speaking northwest and southwest regions.

A government crackdown forced some Ambazonians to flee to Nigeria for survival. There are currently 21,000 to 50,000 living in an aid center at the Agbokim Waterfalls, Nigeria. 

In this article, the author gives a full historical and political background behind this crisis in this region, in addition to personal stories of Ambazonian refugees who become cheap labor in Nigeria. Refugees who, suffering from food scarcity, live in poor sanitary conditions and have little or no access to educational facilities.

It is interesting and tragic to witness how colonial languages can be a reason behind continued suffering in Africa. The heritage of colonization not only divided Africa based on colonial powers' interests, but its effects remain and push for more misery and instability.

Ambazonia Via Cameroon; Colonial Languages Divided a Nation
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