Public scrutiny

Public scrutiny

Media Smears and Manufactured Scandal: Vision 4’s Attack on Journalist J.P. Rémy Ngono Raises Press-Ethics Concerns

J.P. Rémy Ngono, a France-based sports journalist and commentator with Radio France Internationale (RFI), has been the target of sensational accusations broadcast by Vision 4 presenters Bruno Bidjang and Raul Christophe Bia. In a series of widely circulated programmes and tabloid-style reports, the channel levelled damaging personal allegations against the journalist. By The Independentist Political

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Public scrutiny

An Open Letter to Archbishop José Avelino Bettencourt Apostolic Nuncio to Cameroon and Equatorial Guinea. By Nchumbonga George Lekelefac.

AGGRESSIVE KNOCKDOWN VERSION. By The Independentist editorial desk A Church Bleeding While Its Shepherds Choose Convenience Your Excellency,This letter is written because our people are bleeding while those charged to defend them have chosen ceremony over conscience, diplomacy over truth, and political proximity over pastoral responsibility. For nine years, the people of the Ecclesiastical Province

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Public scrutiny

The Lumumbah That Betrayed His Name

Patrice Mboh Lumumbah’s name may glitter today in the headlines of Yaoundé’s state press, but tomorrow it will hang as a warning on the walls of history: This is what becomes of the educated who choose comfort over courage, obedience over competence, and applause over truth. By The Independentist Political DeskNovember 10, 2025 There was

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Public scrutiny

Ali Dan Ismael The Independentist’s editor in chief, just back from special assignment in Yaounde, Xrays Cameroons media landscape

Licensing restrictions, selective advertising, and politically motivated prosecutions have turned the press into an echo chamber. The late Samuel Wazizi, tortured to death in military custody, remains a symbol of what happens when truth confronts tyranny. By Ali Dan Ismael — just back from Yaoundé, Cameroun Journalism: A Profession for Beggars in La République du

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Public scrutiny

Project C — The Last Mask of the Union falling: How Yaoundé’s Anglophone Allies Rebrand Colonial Control

To Eric Chinje, Arrey Obenson, and all who now seek to rewrite their role in this tragedy: You cannot cleanse betrayal with eloquence. You cannot redeem complicity by inventing a “Project C.” Truth is not found in conferences but in confession. By Ali Dan Ismael, Editor-in-Chief, The Independentist The Veil Behind “Concern” A new chorus

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Public scrutiny

When the Church Chose Silence Over Justice

Before the elections, the Bishops of Cameroon had issued a courageous pastoral letter reminding the nation that “the will of the people must be respected.” Those words carried the weight of moral authority — a reminder that democracy is not merely a political ritual, but a sacred obligation to truth and justice. Yet, after the

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Public scrutiny

A concerned and patriotic Ambazonian writes to the CPDM elites and Elecam officials of the North west and south West regions.

THE BETRAYAL WE WILL NEVER FORGETAn Open Letter to the CPDM Elites and ELECAM Officials of the North West and South West Regions By John P. K. Semirnyuy | October 2025 A Day That Shamed the Spirit of Democracy On October 12, 2025, the world watched — or perhaps pretended not to see — as

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Public scrutiny

A concerned citizen of LRC, Vuban Jones, writes to Yang Philemon.

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Public scrutiny

An exposé on deception, betrayal, and the politics of two masters: “The fales professor” Tapang Ivo’s Descent from Keyboard Warrior to Regime Servant.

He is described as a dimwit with untested strategic knowledge, easily manipulable by French Cameroun—his ancestral homeland. Ambazonians and everyone else can see it clearly, except him. By The Independentist news desk Who is Tapang Ivo, and why is he being discussed? Tapang Ivo parades himself on social media like a general without an army

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Public scrutiny

Philemon Yang & Fai Yengo Francis: Loyal Lapdogs of a Crumbling Regime

Philemon Yang and Fai Yengo Francis rose high, but they never stood tall. They had platforms but refused to use them for justice. They had power but lacked courage. In the end, both became symbols of an aging, discredited system By Ali Dan Ismael editor-in-chief on assignment in Yaounde Cameroon. Yaounde October 9th 2025- Philemon

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