When Ignorance Meets Stupidity, People Die. The greatest danger to any revolution is not the enemy—it is ignorance dressed up as leadership.
Mr. Francis Mbah, the South African Spokesperson for Sisiku Ayuk Tabe’s IG-Care, your failure to understand how revolutions are born is the root cause of many preventable deaths in this struggle. When ignorance is amplified by ego and rewarded with a microphone, people die—not accidentally, but predictably.
Let it be stated clearly, without distortion: neitrher Samuel Ikome Sako—nor the Government of the Federal Republic of Southern Cameroons (Ambazonia)—owns fighters. Listen very carefully. I will say this only once. We are not warlords. We do not command mercenaries.
What exists is self-defense, created organically by the people when Paul Biya declared war on our homeland. That is how every genuine revolution in history begins.
The Government of Southern Cameroons has always presented itself as a conduit—not a commander: a diplomatic and political channel through which the grievances of a besieged people are carried to the international community. Its role has never been to command fighters on the ground, but to represent a nation under siege.
Mr. Francis Mbah – Your refusal to grasp this basic revolutionary truth is why you are dangerous to this struggle. Each time you speak, you reveal a mixture of ignorance, opportunism, and a profound lack of leadership capacity. Sometimes, silence is not cowardice—it is responsibility. You should consider it.
Unity Is No Longer Optional
Your ignorance, Sir, does not merely mislead—it kills. And nowhere has that truth been more evident than in the deliberate fragmentation of this revolution.
This struggle was never meant to become a marketplace of franchise governments, personal platforms, or diaspora power games. Every time ego replaced coordination, the cost was paid in Ambazonian blood. No government. No group. No individual. Yes, none owns a bank, a corporation, or a foreign sponsor financing this war.
This resistance survives for one reason only:
the people of Ambazonia and committed diasporans, who have listened to the people’s concerns raised by Dr Samuel Ikome Sako.
Let the record be clear:
None of them have come from the political circles of Sisiku Ayuk Tabe—where you belong—nor from Cho Ayaba, Boh Herbert, Akwanga, Chris Anu, or Marianta. If I am wrong provide your draft schedules. Our 2026 humanitarian Draft schedule is out already. Talk is cheap.
Strangely—and tellingly—these same confused leaders have depended, directly or indirectly, on the very genocidal regime they claim to oppose for their survival. Yet this truth is never spoken aloud. That silence is not strategy. It is hypocrisy.
Since 2018, competing diaspora structures—each chasing relevance and future power—have undermined unity, confused the population, and exposed volunteer freedom fighters and civilians to avoidable danger.
The Record After Nine Years
After nine years, the record is undeniable. Only one government has consistently stood in opposition to Paul Biya’s genocidal regime: the Government of the Federal Republic of Ambazonia under Dr. Samuel Ikome Sako.
In the worldview of IG-Care (Sisiku Ayuk Tabe) or the various IG factions (Marianta, Chris Anu), Dr. Sako is deliberately treated as non-existent.
Why? Because—like their benefactor in Yaoundé—these are the only circles they know how to operate in. These are the people they negotiate with, depend on, and quietly accommodate. Stop playing the ostrich. Time is running out.
Proof, Not Prophecy
The truth is simple—and verifiable.
Dr. Samuel Ikome Sako has engaged more international personalities, institutions, and diplomatic actors than these remnants will encounter in their entire political lifetimes.
For proof, consult the public record: Dr. Sako’s interviews and coverage in Newsweek, Stars and Stripes (the Pentagon’s newspaper), and The Hill—platforms that shape global and U.S. policy discourse.
Now ask the obvious question: when did Ayuk Tabe, Marianta, Akwanga, Chris Anu, or Cho Ayaba receive comparable international visibility? This is not a prophecy from Orock Betang. This is reality.
Obsolete Frameworks and Diplomatic Reality
The era of pressure groups and protest movements is over. The Cameroon Anglophone Movement, the All Anglophone Conference, the SCNC, and similar formations belong to history, not the present struggle.
The representative authority today is the Government of the Federal Republic of Southern Cameroons (Ambazonia)—the lawful continuation of the political trajectory left by the Foncha government and now operating as a government-in-exile.
This reality is reflected in engagement across international institutions and policy circles, including within the Trump Administration. Washington does not engage with SCACUF, IG-Care, IG factions, AAC, CAM, or related relics.
Those labels carry no diplomatic weight, no institutional relevance, and no future utility. Stop recycling expired frameworks. History has moved on—and events now unfolding will make that unmistakably clear.
MM

