
France acknowledges role in repression of Cameroon independence movements
In a letter to the Cameroonian president, Paul Biya, dated 30 July, Emmanuel Macron said it was 'up to me today to assume the role and responsibility of France in these events'.
The letter, which was disclosed on Tuesday, conveyed the findings of a joint Franco-Cameroonian commission that investigated the colonial-era repression of independence movements from 1945 to 1971.
It also took into account crimes committed by the French-allied post-independence government of Ahmadou Ahidjo in Cameroon. Biya served as prime minister under Ahidjo from 1975 to 1982.
Macron said in the letter: 'The commission's historians clearly established that a war took place in Cameroon, during which French colonial authorities and military forces committed various forms of violent repression in several regions of the country, a war that continued beyond 1960, with France's support for actions taken by the independent Cameroonian authorities.
However, Macron did not apologise or mention any form of reparations.
In 1884, the area today known as Cameroon became the German colony of Kamerun. During the first world war, British and French forces seized the territory, which was later split between them by the League of Nations after Germany's defeat in 1919.
In January the commission, which was announced at a joint press conference given by Macron and Biya in Yaoundé, Cameroon's capital, in 2022, submitted its findings in a 1,035-page report. The human toll of the state-sponsored repression is estimated to have been tens of thousands, included the assassination of the nationalist leader Ruben Um Nyobè.
The Cameroonian singer Blick Bassy, a co-head of the commission, said: 'We are only at the beginning of a process that will require several years … to locate and identify the bodies in mass graves and also to address to land issues that continues to affect a large number of Cameroonians today.
'But before anything else [there should be] national mourning, and proper funerals for our compatriot who died for the nation must be organised,' said Bassy, whose 2019 album 1958 paid homage to Nyobè.
'On the French side, public outreach is crucial, integrating this history into the school curriculum so that it is never repeated and also to ensure that the French population can truly understand and accept the country's history.'
For years, France had refused to confront the ghosts of its colonial empire that stretched from Algeria in northern Africa to Benin in the west. But in recent times a new guard of historians and activists, many from former colonies, have categorised official French narratives that barely mentioned the violence of colonial exploits in the 20th century as polished fiction.
This has coincided with a sustained wave of anti-French sentiment in Francophone Africa that has partly spurred coups against governments in the region deemed to be puppets of Paris.
Sign up to The Long Wave
Nesrine Malik and Jason Okundaye deliver your weekly dose of Black life and culture from around the world
after newsletter promotion
The former French leader François Hollande admitted the existence of 'extremely troubled, even tragic episodes' while visiting Yaoundé in 2015. But Macron, more than any of his predecessors, seems to be responding to this pressure with a series of strategic gestures that are often criticised as incomplete.
In 2018, his government initiated the restitution of 26 cultural artefacts to Benin, a direct response to a groundbreaking report he had commissioned. The report, co-authored by the French art historian Bénédicte Savoy and the Senegalese writer Felwine Sarr, argued that these objects were not merely museum pieces but living parts of a cultural memory that belonged back home. A 27th artefact traced to Finland was returned to Benin this May.
Correspondence seen by the Guardian in July revealed that the French government had signalled a willingness to discuss reparations with Niger for the massacre of thousands of citizens in the 1899 mission Afrique centrale (MAC), one of the most violent colonial campaigns in Africa. Again, it stopped short of apologising for its role.
Experts say the conversation now has to move from cultural restitution to a more direct discussion of historical debt and hope that official acknowledgments usher in the real work of reckoning.
Bassy said: 'We are at the point in time when Africa is confronting its history … to come to terms with itself but also to approach its future with greater clarity and confidence.'
Hashtags

Try Our AI Features
Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:
Comments
No comments yet...
Related Articles


Telegraph
an hour ago
- Telegraph
Robert Jenrick accuses French police of ignoring migrants in Calais
Robert Jenrick has accused French police of failing to act after he reported dozens of migrants with life jackets who were preparing to cross the Channel. The shadow justice secretary contacted the authorities after spotting a group of about 50 people holding life jackets at a bus stop near Calais. But Mr Jenrick was told by an emergency call operator that they 'do not think that [the police] would come', and no officer ever turned up. The Tory frontbencher was also forced to cut short his visit to Loon-Plage migrant camp - located between Calais and Dunkirk - when a man 'started throwing glass bottles' that only narrowly missed him. A total of 474 people crossed the Channel in eight small boats on Monday, as the illegal migration crisis continues to worsen under Sir Keir Starmer's Labour Government. In a video shared by Mr Jenrick, he could be seen spotting a group of '60 or 70 migrants holding life jackets' at about 8.30pm on Sunday. The group was gathered at a bus stop with no sign of the French police and eventually boarded a bus despite not having any tickets. Mr Jenrick and his team then followed the bus to Dunkirk, saying: 'We think they're in a little passageway behind these houses. The beach is just there.' There was no sign of the group by just after 4am in the morning, suggesting they had boarded a small boat and attempted to cross the Channel. 'At daybreak, we find the migrants have gone,' Mr Jenrick said in the clip. 'We don't know where. There's still no sign of any police. So I ring them.' During his phone call to the police, Mr Jenrick said: 'I'm in Dunkirk and I saw a large group of maybe 40 or 50 illegal migrants in the cemetery off the main road by the beach.' A female call operator responded: 'He does not think that they're going to come, but he's going to give the information to the police, then the police will decide.' Mr Jenrick then confirmed no police officers arrived despite the three-year Anglo-French deal, first agreed in March 2023, to double the number of French officers on beaches. He said: 'We've given £800 million to France and we didn't see a police officer the whole day, and now we just phoned them and it doesn't sound like they'll even bother to come out.' Elsewhere in the video, Mr Jenrick said Britons were 'told that these are refugees' in small boats, but that differed from his experience at the migrant camps. When he asked one man if he thought he was going to be able to live in London if he crossed the Channel, the man nodded his head. A second migrant who Mr Jenrick spoke to said he was not worried about getting on a small boat and making the dangerous journey across the Channel. In an article for The Telegraph, Mr Jenrick said: 'What I saw in the camps, in the streets and on the beaches was sickening. 'I've been following this for years now, but the reality today is the worst I've ever seen it. The whole racket is a disgrace and the French are aiding and abetting it.' Reflecting on his efforts to ensure a police response to the group of would-be Channel migrants, Mr Jenrick said: 'Before daybreak, it became clear the migrants had departed. Their detritus was scattered around. So we hurried to the beach. 'The migrants were either on their way here, had moved to another beach or perhaps today's journey had been called off for some unknowable reason. This wasn't journalism to me or an academic exercise. 'I want to 'stop the boats' – that's why I resigned from the last government – and a launch was now likely imminently. I called the French police, but they were dismissive of me reporting it. Nobody was deployed.' Mr Jenrick said cooperation between the British and French governments on the issue amounted to 'utter farce' on the part of the French response and 'naivety' from Sir Keir. He also claimed that he had to flee the migrant camp after a migrant attacked him with glass bottles, one of which only narrowly missed his head. 'Many were polite to me, although some threatened me with violence,' Mr Jenrick wrote. 'One, a gangster-like character, told me to leave, pressing himself up close to me in an attempt to intimidate me. 'Another made it clear my time in the camp was up and started throwing glass bottles at me. One hit the ground beside me, another skimmed past my head. I was forced to leave hastily.' Earlier in the week, Chris Philp, the shadow home secretary, said he had a knife pulled on him during a visit to a migrant camp near Calais. The shadow cabinet ministers' visits to the camps by the French port city came after the number of small boat crossings under the Labour Government passed 50,000 this week. The site of the original Calais 'jungle' camp was dismantled almost a decade ago, in October 2016, at the height of the European migrant crisis prompted by the civil war in Syria. But new camps, likened to the original, are also home to thousands of migrants, with record numbers of people successfully making the journey from France to the UK in small boats.


Reuters
2 hours ago
- Reuters
Nigeria approves $2.6 billion electricity sector debt refinancing plan
LAGOS, Aug 14 (Reuters) - Nigeria has approved a phased plan to refinance 4 trillion naira ($2.61 billion) in electricity sector debt to help stabilise the nation's ailing power industry and improve supply, its finance minister said. The debt, primarily owed to 27 power generation companies for outstanding invoices between 2015 and 2023, has stifled investment in the industry and exacerbated chronic power outages in Africa's most populous nation. President Bola Tinubu pledged to settle the claims following a recent verification. He approved the plan on Wednesday. Speaking after a cabinet meeting in the capital Abuja, finance minister Olawale Edun said the refinancing would be executed within three to four weeks under the oversight of the debt management office. "It is now fully approved, and we move to implementation," Edun said. The plan will likely involve bond issuances and other instruments to spread out the repayment liability over time. This aligns with broader sector reforms, including a 35% cut in electricity subsidies and tariff hikes for urban consumers, measures expected to save the government around 1.1 trillion naira, or around $718.58 million, annually. ($1 = 1,530.8000 naira)


The Independent
10 hours ago
- The Independent
Trump ‘did not like' moment Macron called him out over Putin during high-stakes call with European leaders
Donald Trump 'did not like' being called out by Emmanuel Macron during a high-stakes call with European leaders, ahead of his bilateral meeting with Vladimir Putin. The French president took 'very tough positions,' and reportedly told Trump Wednesday that a meeting was 'a very big thing' to give Putin, sources familiar with the call told Axios. "Trump didn't like that,' the source added. The U.S. president is set to meet with his authoritarian Russian counterpart on Friday in Alaska, the first time Putin has set foot on American soil since 2015. The pair will discuss bringing about an end to the Russian war in Ukraine, which has raged since February 2022. Trump told the European leaders, which included Ukrainian President Volodymyr Zelensky, that his goals for the summit were to secure a ceasefire and to better understand whether a full peace is possible. As well as Macron's hardline position, Axios reported that German Chancellor Friedrich Merz and NATO Secretary General Mark Rutte were both "very active" on the call, and Italian Prime Minister Giorgia Meloni"raised some good points." Zelensky, who at this stage will not be present at Friday's meeting, told Trump that Putin 'cannot be trusted,' the outlet's source added. Speaking to reporters following the meeting on Wednesday, Trump said that he could not guarantee success on the ceasefire, and his administration previously described the meeting as a However, Trump also added that Putin would face 'severe consequences' if the Russian leader does not agree to a ceasefire, though he did not specify exactly what those consequences would be. Russia is likely to resist Ukraine and Europe's demands strongly and previously said its stance had not changed since it was set out by Putin in June 2024. When asked if Russia would face any consequences if Putin does not agree to stop the war after Friday's meeting, Trump responded: 'Yes, they will.' Asked if those consequences would be sanctions or tariffs, Trump told reporters: 'I don't have to say, there will be very severe consequences." The president also described another aim of the meeting as "setting the table" for a quick follow-up that would include Zelensky. "If the first one goes okay, we'll have a quick second one," he said. "I would like to do it almost immediately, and we'll have a quick second meeting between President Putin and President Zelenskiy and myself, if they'd like to have me there." Trump did not provide a time frame for a second meeting.