The Independentist News Blog Letters to the Editor An Ambazonian self-defense analyst writes to the Independentist news editorial team.
Letters to the Editor

An Ambazonian self-defense analyst writes to the Independentist news editorial team.

Letter to the Editor.

Dear Editor.

I write to you as a fervent reader of your online news publication and a self-defense analyst of the Ambazonian revolution on the recent happenings in LRC.

Cameroon’s Presidential Song and Dance Will Not Distract Ambazonia

As the La République du Cameroun presidential circus resumes its predictable rotation, a new cast of old characters takes centre stage: Maurice Kamto, the ever-calculating reformist in a broken system, and Issa Tchiroma Bakary, the newly “converted” federalist who once denied the very crisis he now exploits for political currency.

But to these aspirants for a crumbling colonial throne, let this be made clear once and for all: Ambazonians are not interested in your elections, your federalisms, your national dialogues, nor your cleverly worded open letters. We’ve heard them all before.

Just as in 1961, the so-called “choices” being paraded before the Ambazonian people are two sides of the same colonial coin:

Join in a so-called union (which history has proven was neither legal nor respected), or

Be lured into a deceptive federal arrangement that inevitably leads back to centralized Francophone domination.

We reject both.

And if the ears of the political class in Yaoundé have been sealed with arrogance and wax, then perhaps it’s time they borrowed an ear pod to clean them out. Because the message from Ambazonia is loud, clear, and non-negotiable:

The problem is not governance. The problem is not marginalization. The problem is occupation.

What began as a protest in 2016 has crystallized into an irreversible liberation movement. The battlefield has spoken: La République du Cameroun’s soldiers are weary, overstretched, and demoralized. Their so-called elite forces now hide behind sandbags and propaganda. Meanwhile, the resolve of the Ambazonian State Army grows firmer each day. That is the language of the streets—and even the regime knows it.

What follows next is not a debate about the form of the state, nor a power-sharing gimmick. What follows is a political settlement to end an illegal union. Not an inclusion. Not a reform. Not a federation. Separation.

The only legitimate conversation to be had now is how to peacefully end this colonial experiment and recognize the Federal Republic of Ambazonia as a free and sovereign state.

To those presidential hopefuls in Yaoundé still dreaming of “reforming the Republic,” perhaps it’s time to wake up. The road to peace runs not through Mfoundi, but through negotiation with the legitimate Ambazonian leadership in exile.

Pick up the phone. Talk to President Dr. Samuel Ikome Sako. That is where the solution lies.

The world is watching, and so are Ambazonians at home and abroad. We are not confused. We are not divided. We are not fooled. We are determined to complete the decolonization that was denied us in 1961.

No more songs. No more dances.
It is time for a dignified, negotiated separation.

For publication by The Independentist
By an Ambazonian Self-Defense Analyst

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