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« Photos: Thank you Ms. Charlotte Mbango | Main | Just Published: "Scribbles from the Den" the Book »

Tuesday, 02 June 2009

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Ras Tuge

Mola,

with or without a dual citizenship, people can still invest back home if they have the WILL to do so. You left Cameroon just yesterday, and now you are already chasing Babylon shadows with a notion that is scarcely of absolute necessity to Cameroon's survival as a nation.

You talk of the ever growing Cameroonian Diaspora communities as though this automatically translates into fortunes that MUST transform and re-write the rules and regulations by which Cameroon is governed! Well, not so fast man. It is one thing to encourage Cameroonians to invest back home, but to make it sound as though the lack of dual nationality impedes any remittance flow endeavours from Diaspora communities is not a bountiful excuse for not exploring the extensive potentials that Cameroon has.

When i acquired European citizenship twelve years ago, i was compelled to relinquish my Cameroonian nationality, a thing which i did reluctantly. But as a man on the move, i did it anyway, for it was a question of survival. I returned to Cameroon last december and i hardly felt how it affected me to be European. By contrast, i couldn't quite see the effects of what you describe as vibrant Cameroonian Diaspora communities.

When you consider the number of Cameroonians residing abroad today, and who probably wire colossal sums of money back home, you would expect to see a remarkably transformed country after some good seventeen years or so. Rather, the development is haphazard, growth is almost stagnant and curiously poverty still reigns supreme as beggars and criminals loiter around for hours unending. But when people choose not to invest in avenues that would regenerate income, and hence maximise surplus value, then ofcourse family members will always remain wasteful recipients of whatever hard-earned remittances they get.

Damien

I think the basic arguments that Dibussi makes here are the following:
1. Cameroon's nationality laws are not enforced equally and creates two or even three classes of Cameroonians

2. It is in the best interest of developing countries such as Cameroon to do everything possible to ensure that their citizens are never "lost" to other nations; and dual nationality is one way to do this

3. Experiences from other countries, from India, South Africa to Ghana has shown that dual citizenship makes it easier for Diaspora communities to be more directly involved in the economic life of their countries of origin. Cameroon may not yet have a community that is as rich and innovative as India's but that should not stop the government of Cameroon from being proactive and preparing for the future.

4. Bottom line. It is Cameroon which loses on this issue rather than the individual with the European or American passport as you have pointed out in your comment. This really means nothing to our leaders since they don't care. But if they did, then they would do their best to update our nationality laws to reflect not just trends in the global village, but also the REAlITY at the Douala international airport.

Che Sunday

Nigeria has it with the U.S, Ghana has it with the U.S. I guess these countries are not as smart as Cameroon. The share hypocracy with the situation is that if you are francophone and carrying a French passport, you are still as Cameroonian as the next guy to you. If you are Anglo, you stand a chance in hell getting a French passport. But carrying an American or English passport, is a death nail on your coffin. You are a traitor, period. You must apply for a visa each time you intend to visit home. Sounds like the trimmings of apartheid to me.

DR. Dickson

In fact, the issue of legalising dual citizenship is not only an issue of concern for a particular political party, it is an issue for all those who loves the development of the country. It is of course, true that the regime in power may be better placed to come up with a bill that will successfully go through in the parliament; the SDF, CDU, NUDP, UPC also have a greater role to play. The African countries cited in this piece, i.e, Ghana, South Africa et al, are not in the losing position by having dual citizenship. Rather, they are better off.

I do not blame PM Inoni for for brushing off the issue. Afterall, he he grew up in a close system and has never ventured to live out of Cameroon to be able to understand the relevance of Dual citizenship not only to the individual but to Cameroon as a whole. He needs to be convinced by people like Professor Ngolle Ngolle, Dr. Dion Ngute and Mr. Luc Atangana who have lived and studied in Europe/America.

 Ewi

In my comment the other day,I noted that Dual citizenship in Cameroon is not something to be debated.It is something to be corrected or better still,rectified and implemented by law,because it exist already despite being absent in paper.There is nothing to lobby about.The handwritting is on the wall.

Chief Nfor

Hi Dr Dickson,
I think it's of great importance to verify your facts before posting them online.However,PM Inoni studied and lived in the U.S.His first wife refused traveling back home with him after he completed his studies in the U.S.So,he is no stranger in the live abroad.

Daniel Anjeh

To advocates of dual nationality, please answer this simple question, " Why should Cameroonians have a President with a nondescript citizenship?"

We are trying to extricate ourselves from neo-colonialism and here today we are talking of dual citizenship!!! Heaven forbids!

I have lived abroad for the best part of my adult life. Nothing stops me going to invest in Cameroon and I have been doing just that. As for politics, you are either Cameroonian or you are not. That is the case with other countries.
Britain is different given her colonial legacy, so let us not even start making comparisons there.
I fail to see the merits of this dual nationality! This is but an academic exercise and at best a distraction to the problems of our country-Cameroon.

Facter

This is to Anjeh. Blind, proud chest-beating nationalism is so yesterday. People of dual nationality are making vast differences in their countries of origin. To name a few: India, China, Taiwan, Ghana and Nigeria. In its present status, Cameroon passport is a document of shame, because of its nasty leadership and worldwide reputation for corruption. If somebody who has had the opportunity to upgrade wants to hold on to it and you guys are so arrogant, fine! Why do I call it an upgrade? We are still a colonized world, and in that colonized world, there are three classes of citizenship. If you have to stand on the line and go through humiliating interviews because you want or need to travel to most other parts of the world, my friend, you have a third class citizenship. You have limited mobility and opportunity in this planet of OURS. I am not saying it is just. It is only the fact. If some of your friends and compatriots have increased mobility, they stand a good chance over a period of time of helping to change this state of affairs for the rest who are trapped in the hell hole.

You heard me right. Present Cameroon passport is the toilet paper of the planet.

Danny Boy

Facter,
you seem to have reduced this debate to the holding of passports of different nations for your ease of globe-trotting, thanks to globalization. Nothing stops you holding one or more passports from any number of countries of your choice, but does holding a passport of a country make you a citizen of that country? Please note, the article above is on dual citizenship.
I need not define what citizenship means, for I believe you know. Curiously too citizenship could also be equated to nationalism. Until there is a world government, states will continue to protect their self interests. Cameroonians who have naturalized within the Diaspora are free to go to Cameroon and invest. If they want to partake in the politics of Cameroon, the statutes are there permitting them to do so. I think one of these requires them to be resident in Cameroon for a certain length of time-5 years?. Is this too much to ask? Ha ha.. I see, if you are naturalised in the UK (even Nationals), you can not stay out of the UK for more than two years without your "billet de sejour" or citizenship being revoked!!!
Gone are the days when Senghor and co used to be deputies in the French Assembly and the Pas- Endeley, Foncha et al in the Eastern House of Assembly in Nigeria!!! As I said earlier, in politics you are Cameroonian or not. You can not be a British Parliamentarian and Cameroon's Foreign Minister at the same time. That is a quirk that dual citizenship can foist unto us. Just for laughs, President Obama could also be the President of Kenya! Why not?

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