Maitre Julius Achu: Defender of Nothing, Critic of Courage
By Dr. Martin Mungwa – The Voice of Ambazonia
BREAKING: In a rare moment of candour on state-run television in La République du Cameroun (LRC), two Francophone journalists have risked career and comfort to admit what Ambazonians have always known: Cameroon has never elected a president. From the day France handed “independence” to Ahmadou Ahidjo in 1960 to today’s grotesque theatre with Paul Biya, power has remained the private property of the French state—administered by local proxies for colonial convenience.
And now, in July 2025, France has gone one step further: announcing the presidential candidacy of Paul Biya from a French hospital—a man too frail to walk, let alone lead. The French Embassy in Yaoundé, not ELECAM or CPDM, now doubles as Cameroon’s electoral headquarters. This is not sovereignty; it is submission.
Ambazonian Clarity vs Francophone Confusion
We, Ambazonians, declared our liberation in 2017 precisely because we understood this colonial scam long before any CRTV host did. We saw through the FrancAfrique charade and chose the harder path: resistance.
But even as Francophone voices begin to awaken, something bizarre is happening within our own ranks: a few disgruntled, self-absorbed Ambazonian regime apologists have begun to blame the very revolution that has protected our dignity for nearly a decade.
Among the loudest of these opportunists is none other than Maitre Julius Achu—a man whose reputation in the legal world is more myth than merit.
Maitre Julius Achu: Defender of Nothing, Critic of Courage
Let it be recorded that Julius Achu has never won a single notable case in his life. A courtroom tourist masquerading as legal counsel, Achu has spent more time criticizing the revolution than defending any actual victim of the genocidal regime.
His only consistent objection to the Ambazonian struggle? That we took up arms for self-defense.
How pathetic.
Has he read international law? Does he know that under Article 51 of the UN Charter, every people under occupation has the right to individual and collective self-defense?
Apparently not. Because to cowards like Achu, the problem is not the regime that burns down villages or massacres school children—the problem is the Ambazonian fighter who dares to resist.
That’s not legal wisdom. That’s colonial indoctrination dressed in a cheap suit.
When Cowards Call Visionaries “Incapable”
And yet, these same failed elites now accuse Ambazonian intellectuals of being incapable of changing the status quo. How delusional!
The Ambazonian thinker has already done what no Francophone intellectual has dared: diagnose the disease of French imperialism, propose the cure of separation, and pay the price of freedom with blood and exile.
These collaborators, meanwhile, hide in hotels in Yaoundé and pretend to matter.
Biya: The Appointed Corpse
Let us not romanticize this moment. Paul Biya’s candidacy is not democracy—it is a colonial appointment by foreign powers.
From his hospital bed in Paris, Biya is not “running” for anything. He is being dragged by France to obstruct Ambazonia’s liberation and delay the inevitable collapse of Francophone Africa’s most loyal vassal.
Ambazonia’s Path: No Retreat, No Election
As a matter of national policy:
We shall not participate in the fraudulent October 12, 2025, elections.
A full lockdown will be enforced from October 10 to October 24 across all Ambazonian counties to prevent occupation forces from staging their masquerade on our land.
Any attempt to vote or campaign in Southern Cameroons will be seen as a provocation and violation of our sovereignty.
To the Francophone Masses: Join the Fire, or Stay in the Frying Pan
We welcome the awakening of Francophone journalists—but we’ve been in this fire for years. If you are serious about change, you must stop whispering and start resisting. Refuse to vote. Refuse to be used. And refuse to be France’s African underling.
Final Word: The Status Quo is Not Our Failure
To Maitre Achu and all the house slaves of this colonial estate: the failure to end tyranny does not lie with the resister—but with the regime you defend.
The Ambazonian revolution may not be perfect. But we are standing. We are fighting. And unlike you—we have chosen honour over comfort.
History will remember who stood with the people—and who sat on their necks in the name of caution.