Bloggers' Club

  • If you write well in English and have strong opinions please CLICK HERE to blog at Up Station Mountain Club.

Search this Site

July 2009

Sun Mon Tue Wed Thu Fri Sat
      1 2 3 4
5 6 7 8 9 10 11
12 13 14 15 16 17 18
19 20 21 22 23 24 25
26 27 28 29 30 31  
AddThis Social Bookmark Button

Jimbi Media Sites

  • AFRICAphonie
    AFRICAphonie is a Pan African Association which operates on the premise that AFRICA can only be what AFRICANS and their friends want AFRICA to be.
  • Jacob Nguni
    Virtuoso guitarist, writer and humorist. Former lead guitarist of Rocafil, led by Prince Nico Mbarga.
  • Postwatch Magazine
    A UMI (United Media Incorporated) publication. Specializing in well researched investigative reports, it focuses on the Cameroonian scene, particular issues of interest to the former British Southern Cameroons.
  • Bernard Fonlon
    Dr Bernard Fonlon was an extraordinary figure who left a large footprint in Cameroonian intellectual, social and political life.
  • George Ngwane: Public Intellectual
    George Ngwane is a prominent author, activist and intellectual.
  • PostNewsLine
    PostNewsLine is an interactive feature of 'The Post', an important newspaper published out of Buea, Cameroons.
  • France Watcher
    Purpose of this advocacy site: To aggregate all available information about French terror, exploitation and manipulation of Africa
  • Bakwerirama
    Spotlight on the Bakweri Society and Culture. The Bakweri are an indigenous African nation.
  • Simon Mol
    Cameroonian poet, writer, journalist and Human Rights activist living in Warsaw, Poland
  • Bate Besong
    Bate Besong, award-winning firebrand poet and playwright.
  • Fonlon-Nichols Award
    Website of the Literary Award established to honor the memory of BERNARD FONLON, the great Cameroonian teacher, writer, poet, and philosopher, who passionately defended human rights in an often oppressive political atmosphere.
  • Scribbles from the Den
    The award-winning blog of Dibussi Tande, Cameroon's leading blogger.
  • Omoigui.com
    Professor of Medicine and interventional cardiologist, Nowa Omoigui is also one of the foremost experts and scholars on the history of the Nigerian Military and the Nigerian Civil War. This site contains many of his writings and comments on military subjects and history.
  • Victor Mbarika ICT Weblog
    Victor Wacham Agwe Mbarika is one of Africa's foremost experts on Information and Communication Technologies (ICTs). Dr. Mbarika's research interests are in the areas of information infrastructure diffusion in developing countries and multimedia learning.
  • Martin Jumbam
    The refreshingly, unique, incisive and generally hilarous writings about the foibles of African society and politics by former Cameroon Life Magazine columnist Martin Jumbam.
  • Enanga's POV
    Rosemary Ekosso, a Cameroonian novelist and blogger who lives and works in Cambodia.
  • Godfrey Tangwa aka Rotcod Gobata
    Renaissance man, philosophy professor, actor and newspaper columnist, Godfrey Tangwa aka Rotcod Gobata touches a wide array of subjects. Always entertaining and eminently readable. Visit for frequent updates.
  • Francis Nyamnjoh
    Francis B. Nyamnjoh is Associate Professor and Head of Publications and Dissemination with the Council for the Development of Social Science Research in Africa (CODESRIA).
  • Ilongo Sphere
    Novelist and poet Ilongo Fritz Ngalle, long concealed his artist's wings behind the firm exterior of a University administrator and guidance counsellor. No longer. Enjoy his unique poems and glimpses of upcoming novels and short stories.

  • Up Station Mountain Club
    A no holds barred group blog for all things Cameroonian. "Man no run!"
Start Geesee CHAT

« An Open Letter To CNPS Director General | Main | Military Coups In African Dictatorships: Liberation Or Retrogression? »

Monday, 05 January 2009

Paul Biya And New Year 2009

By Tazoacha Asonganyi

The year 2008 ended with another presidential address to the nation from Paul Biya. Like for many before it, the speech had no take home message. It was all about generalities and wishes, and bereft of concrete plans of action for 2009.

For example, for an African country like ours, the financial crisis currently rocking the 
world is far beyond stating that it started in the USA and spread to Europe, then to the Far East and finally rocked the whole world.

Indeed, for us, the crisis is a clear signal that the Bretton Woods agreements that were meant to provide financial stability to the world’s financial market and the World Bank/IMF whose mission was  to integrate newly independent nations (like Cameroon) into the world economy were not good enough.

This is because these financial systems were based on the now discredited theory of 
unfettered markets that are self-correcting; therefore the policies sold to us “newly 
independent countries” that ranged from structural adjustment plans (SAP) to the highly 
indebted poor countries initiative (HIPCI) inflicted enormous social and economic costs on 
our societies.

An African Head of State on behalf of his people who suffered from what we now know to be misguided policies should firmly call for change, and propose the changes expected, rather than state meekly that if the crisis bring about "the reorganisation of the global financial system and the regulation of the globalisation, it could be expected that its effects would  be limited in scope and duration...".

In other words, contrary to his utterance that "we have to count on our own strength", he is effectively resigning to our fate and hoping that the saving grace will come from the same people who formulated the Bretton Woods agreements in the first place!

When electoral fraud is used to obtain "large and homogenous" majorities, this is a sign of 
the maturity of the people; on the other hand, when the people rise up against “rising cost of living, water and electricity shortage and unemployment” the people are said to be 
politically exploited by quacks/apprentice sorcerers.

To these quacks of yesterday – leaders of political parties, trade unions and associations –  we are told that their role “as intermediaries is to transmit to government the grievances of their constituents...”; swearing with his hand on his breast that he will always have a keen ear to their demands!

But the people remember that it is his "large and homogenous" majority that voted down the request of the opposition that mounting social problems be addressed before they got out of hand. He expects that when his "large and homogenous" majority indulges in such senselessness, the people should go down on their knees and beg him as if he is a gate-keeper of a private estate.

In any case, if Paul Biya becomes a keen listener in 2009, the better for all of us. But I 
doubt that there can be such an evolution because he expects political parties, trade unions and associations to be passive transmitters of information to him so he can determine if the grievances are “well founded”! If they give civic education to the sovereign people on whose behalf the government is supposed to act, this constitutes "political exploitation" by quacks and apprentices...!

Indeed, I doubt that he will lend an attentive ear, since he continues to claim that a 
majority of Cameroonians understand the meaning of the recent constitutional change. He 
knows very well that only his fabricated “large and homogenous” majority understands it, not the people who are anxious about the fate of the country after decades of this one man show.

I doubt that he will lend an attentive ear because, after filling ELECAM with stalwarts of 
the CPDM, he claims that it will "strengthen the credibility of our electoral system", as if 
their signing pieces of paper that they have resigned from the CPDM will remove their 
sympathy for the CPDM from their hearts.

It is only the government that through macro- and micro-economic policies can create 
conditions for substantial reduction of unemployment. So what is the level of unemployment in Cameroon?   It is with respect to how many jobs are lacking in Cameroon that any government effort towards job creation can be described as “substantial”.

However, in spite of his describing the impending recruitment into the army and the police as a “substantial” effort of government, he still says that our employment policy should be “more vigorous”. How? Like for every sector addressed by him, we are left with only such generalities that cannot allow any scientific evaluation of the performance of government in the sectors in 2009.

During 2008, like for many years before it, our politics have centred on one man – Paul 
Biya. He has radiated like the sun, rewarding some loyalists and punishing some; crushing 
factions and ambition, and nurturing rumours about everything around him.  He has shown us that power can outwait rumours; that power can trample on the rule of law; and that power can be ruthless.

But he knows that power cannot outwait its end! It is to the interest of the country that he spends 2009 thinking about Cameroon after the end of his power. There will be a future 31 December that will not belong to him!

Comments

Feed You can follow this conversation by subscribing to the comment feed for this post.

Love this article: product of a sound economic mind.'There will be a future 31 December that will not belong to him'.Thanks for the hope you raise in some of us.Thumbs up.

Verify your Comment

Previewing your Comment

This is only a preview. Your comment has not yet been posted.

Working...
Your comment could not be posted. Error type:
Your comment has been posted. Post another comment

The letters and numbers you entered did not match the image. Please try again.

As a final step before posting your comment, enter the letters and numbers you see in the image below. This prevents automated programs from posting comments.

Having trouble reading this image? View an alternate.

Working...

Post a comment

Start Geesee CHAT

Up Station Mountain Club Newsfeed


Conception & Design


  • Jimbi Media

  • domainad1

Google