Originally published by FPRI: Cameroon: Africa’s Unseen Crisis - Foreign Policy Research Institute (fpri.org)
Cameroon: Africa's Unseen Crisis
by Charles A. Ray and Hermann A. Ndofor
The international
community has fallen asleep at the wheel when it comes to the crisis in
Cameroon. Brutal killings burned villages and hundreds of thousands of
displaced people – and the reaction is a deafening silence.
–Jan Egeland,
Secretary General of the Norwegian Refugee Council
In terms of
international attention, not all conflicts are equal. Some, like Russia’s war
against Ukraine, receive the lion’s share of global media coverage and
diplomatic engagement. Others, sadly, are ignored by the vast majority of
foreign policy experts. The crisis in Cameroon, the site of one of the world’s
unseen wars for nearly six years, falls into that latter category. This Central
African country of 26 million people has been locked in a series of conflicts,
ranging from fighting between the Francophone central government and Anglophone
separatists in southern Cameroon to interethnic clashes in the country’s north.
Killings, kidnappings, and internal displacement of people fleeing the
violence, if left unchecked, could lead to another Rwanda-type catastrophe.
Over 6,000 people
have been killed and nearly one million people have already
been displaced by
the ongoing violence in the country. The presence of Boko Haram in the north,
growing ties between Cameroon and Russia, and the recent introduction of the
Kremlin-linked private military company, the Wagner Group, only adds fuel to an
already volatile situation.
The United States is
beginning to recognize the extent of the challenge in Cameroon. Last month,
Department of Homeland Security Secretary Alejandro N. Mayorkas granted
temporary protective status to Cameroonians who were already
residing in the United States on April 14. This action, which the Center for
American Progress estimates will
apply to up to 40,000 people, is for a period of 18 months. While this is a
good first step, more needs to be done to stop the violence before it spirals
out of control. The Anglophone-Francophone conflict in the south, combined with
interethnic violence in the country’s north, if allowed to go unchecked, could
very well turn into a Rwanda-like catastrophe that would require outside
intervention to prevent genocide. The United States should coordinate with the
United Nations, the African Union, regional groupings, and Cameroon’s neighbors
to encourage all sides in the separatist conflict to find peaceful ways to
settle their differences. Doing so would save lives, prevent an even greater
humanitarian disaster, and advance U.S. diplomatic and security interests.
Backsliding in
Cameroon
Cameroon was once
considered a beacon of stability in Africa. After its independence from France
in 1960, Cameroon enjoyed a period of peace that allowed the country to develop
critical infrastructure such as roads and railways and profitable agricultural
and petroleum industries. The Francophone majority, however, dominated the
central government. As a result, the Anglophone region of the country was
marginalized and left out of power sharing. Tensions between the two groups
intensified when Ahmadou Ahidjo, the country’s first post-independence
president, resigned in 1982 and was replaced by Paul Biya, a position he has
held ever since.
Differences between
Francophone and Anglophone Cameroonians were further exacerbated in 2008, when
the constitution was amended to abolish presidential term limits. This allowed
Biya, whose Cameroon People’s Democratic Movement holds a strong majority in
the National Assembly, to become president for life.
For the last several
years, international experts have been concerned that Cameroon
could descend into chaos. In 2016, lawyers, students, and teachers from the
country’s English-speaking minority launched protests objecting to their
under-representation and cultural marginalization by the central government.
The state responded with a brutal crackdown. The ensuing violence has caused a
massive dislocation. According to the U.S.
Holocaust Memorial Museum, Cameroon security forces have engaged in
a scorched earth policy of razing villages and indiscriminately torturing,
maiming, and killing civilians with tactics that border on ethnic cleansing.
These actions have targeted the people of Southern Cameroon, home to the
country’s Christian Anglophone minority. Genocide Watch has described the actions of
the Cameroon government in Southern Cameroon as “extermination”—the
ninth stage of genocide. The
tenth and last stage is denial. The Norwegian Refugee Council identified
Southern Cameroon as the world’s most
neglected displacement crisis in 2019.
Russian Advances in
the Gulf of Guinea
Cameroon lies in the
center of the Gulf of Guinea in Central Africa. The region accounts for 60
percent of the continent’s oil production and contains 4.5 percent of
proven global oil reserves. Cameroon produces
66,000 barrels per day and is the fifth-largest oil producer in Africa (Nigeria
is the largest producer of oil on the continent). Cameroon’s population is
projected to rise to 50 million by 2050 and to nearly 90 million by 2099.
Despite it’s
geopolitical significance, the United States routinely ignores this part of
Africa. Washington, for example, allocated only 8
percent of the meagre $2 billion budget for U.S. Africa Command
in 2020 to the region. The United States currently only has a nominal presence
in the Gulf of Guinea. In the past, France was the dominant foreign power.
But as in the Sahara,
the sands of the Gulf are shifting, and not necessarily in favor of U.S.
interests, or even France’s for that matter. From the Central African Republic
through Mali to Guinea, there is a distinct and dramatic move away from relying
on French military support. In its stead, Russia and China are quickly securing
strategic positions within the region. Russia has become the preferred military
partner of the Central African Republic and Mali in their fights against
insurgents. In March 2022, France announced the withdrawal of
its troops from Mali, the first time Mali will be without French troops since
1892. The dominant foreign military presence in Mali now is the Russian
government-linked private military company, the Wagner Group.
The group is fast becoming the preferred military support option for
governments in the region, undercutting U.S. efforts to promote rule of law and
respect for human rights in sub-Saharan Africa. With the Wagner Group’s focus
on protecting ruling elites and critical infrastructure in exchange for commercial
concessions, it is inevitable that Cameroon is likely to be their
next target.
On April 12, 2022,
Cameroon’s defense minister, Joseph Beti Assomo signed a military
cooperation agreement in Moscow with his Russian counterpart. A
few days later, former U.S. Assistant Secretary of State for African Affairs
Tibor Nagy tweeted,
“I cannot believe that the Cameroonian government, in incredibly bad timing,
signed a military agreement with Russia – at the height of the aggression in
Ukraine.” In U.N. General Assembly votes condemning Russia’s invasion of Ukraine,
Cameroon—like many African countries—abstained from voting.
While China has not yet
established a significant presence in Cameroon, there has been speculation that
the Chinese navy is working with Equatorial Guinea to allow the construction of
a Chinese naval
base at the mainland port of Bata. Few details of the Chinese
plan are currently known, but if true, having a Chinese naval presence on
Africa’s west coast—placing warships within easy striking distance of targets
on the U.S. eastern seaboard—has implications for U.S. national security. China
has also provided military
training and equipment to Cameroon, ostensibly to use in its
operations against Boko Haram, but there have been unsubstantiated reports that
much of the Chinese-provided equipment has been shifted to the south for use in
the fight against the Anglophone separatists.
Cameroon’s growing ties
with Russia and its stance in the United Nations come despite extensive
American assistance to the country. Over the past decade, the United States has
provided significant military aid to Cameroon. The fiscal year 2020 amount,
for instance, was $8.4 million under the category of cooperative threat
reduction. However, in 2019, U.S. Africa Command cut over $17 million of
funding to Cameroon due to “growing concerns over the government’s human rights
record.” According to a 2012 PBS report,
in 2010, the United States provided $1.5 million in military aid to Cameroon,
and the total amount of aid from independence from 1960 to 2010 was $71.5
million. At the same time, reporting in 2022 suggested that the United States
was still supporting and employing a Cameroonian unit alleged to have committed
atrocities, including extrajudicial killings to conduct counter-terrorism operations
against violent extremist organizations, especially Boko Haram. This came eight
months after the announced cut because of human rights concerns. There have
also been reports that
elite units that were trained by the United States for the fight against Boko
Haram were deployed to fight against the separatists. Until early 2020 there
were reported to be as many as 300 U.S. military personnel deployed to Cameroon
in connection with the counter-terrorism operations.
Implications for U.S.
Policy
In addition to granting
temporary protective status to Cameroonians, on April 18, 2022, the U.S. State
Department issued a Level 2 travel advisory for
the country, advising Americans to “exercise increased caution in Cameroon due
to crime” and not to travel to the northwest and southwest regions due to armed
conflict.
But Cameroon seems to be
under the radar, especially with the current focus on the situation in Ukraine
taking up most of America’s diplomatic attention. While both sides in the
conflict have been accused of committing atrocities, it is the people of
Cameroon who bear the brunt of the suffering. With the introduction of Russian
mercenaries into the equation and the lack of attention from the United States
and France, the situation is likely to worsen. The presence of Boka Haram and
China in the region only complicates matters for the United States and its
Africa policy. Until the current conflict in Cameroon is ended, it will be
difficult to establish the kind of bilateral relationship that would be
mutually beneficial between Washington and Yaoundé.
Besides the humanitarian
imperative to end the conflict in Cameroon, the United States has a legitimate
security interest in stabilizing the country. Boko Haram is
active in Cameroon. The terrorist group has killed at least 80 civilians since
December 2020 and looted hundreds of homes in the Far North region.
Countering extremism and
terrorist activity is an important goal but the pursuit of this goal should not
lead to undermining the U.S. commitment to respect for human rights and rule of
law. The vetting of individuals and organizations to receive assistance in
counter-terrorism operations should be comprehensive. Past support of terrorist
groups should be examined and appropriate actions are taken to terminate any
ongoing support to human rights violators.
It is important that the
United States not be seen as taking sides in Cameroon’s domestic disputes. Both
the central government and the separatist movement should be held accountable
for any actions taken against the civilian population or violations of human
rights. The roots of the current Francophone-Anglophone conflict have been
growing for decades, as have the ethnic conflicts between other groups in
Cameroon, such as the 2021 clashes between
Arab Shoa cattle herders and Massa farmers and Mousgoum fishermen in northern
Cameroon. Inter-communal tensions in the Far North region of Cameroon have been
amplified by the negative impacts of climate change, with increased
desertification that has led to water scarcity and decreased access to grazing
land.
There are no quick and
easy solutions to the crisis in Cameroon. Likewise, the ability of the U.S. to
directly affect affairs in Cameroon is admittedly limited. But the United
States can pursue diplomatic efforts to influence the African Union, and
Cameroon’s neighbors, most notably Nigeria, to work with all sides in Cameroon
to end the violence. In particular, Washington should empower the African Union
to take a more active role in
mediating the conflict.
The United Nations also
has a role to play. In October 2021, for example, despite the reports of the
central government’s failure to provide adequate protection to civilian
populations, Cameroon was re-elected to the U.N. Human Rights Council for the
2022–2024 term. This was a major setback to international diplomacy and
weakened any effort to compel the warring parties in Cameroon to respect human
rights.
If the United States
does not take an active diplomatic role in seeking to end the conflict in
Cameroon, the situation there will only get worse.
The views expressed in
this article are those of the author alone and do not necessarily reflect the
position of the Foreign Policy Research Institute, a non-partisan organization
that seeks to publish well-argued, policy-oriented articles on American foreign
policy and national security priorities.
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