Staff report By Joseph FitzBobe
BUEA – An unfolding investigation by The Independentist News has uncovered fresh details concerning the network of individuals facilitating a silent but deadly purge of civilians in Southern Cameroons (Ambazonia). At the centre of this operation is a trio of collaborators—Nkonda Titus (popularly known as MKPD), Victor Mengot, and Senator Tabe Tando—who are allegedly enabling a campaign of state-sponsored genocide against the Ambazonian population through intelligence sharing, propaganda, and political complicity.
This revelation comes amid widespread military atrocities, such as the recent incident in Manyu County, where a young farmer was gunned down after escaping through a window when French Cameroun soldiers stormed his residence at 12:30 a.m. Eyewitnesses report that the man was shot from behind while fleeing into a cassava farm. He was unarmed and unaffiliated with any separatist movement—his only “crime” was being Ambazonian. His death is just one among hundreds that remain undocumented and unpunished.
The MKPD Files: Profiling for Elimination
Central to this covert operation is Mr Nkonda Titus, alias MKPD, who is alleged to operate a digital surveillance and denunciation platform disguised as an “anti-separatist blog.” Multiple independent sources confirm that Mr Titus compiles and transmits lists of individuals he designates as “enemies of the state”—most of whom are peaceful civilians. These lists are said to be used by French Cameroun security forces to carry out targeted eliminations without judicial process.
Victims of this profiling are often abducted at night, tortured, or summarily executed. Their families are left with no closure, and their deaths are rarely acknowledged by the colonial authorities in Yaoundé. According to experts monitoring the conflict, this pattern strongly suggests a policy of quiet extermination—one that mimics the structure of death squads under military dictatorships elsewhere in history.
Political Collaboration from Within
While Nkonda Titus functions as an operational link, analysts are raising alarm over the role of senior CPDM politicians and traditional figures. Among the most prominently implicated are:
Victor Mengot, a high-ranking member of the ruling CPDM regime, whose close alignment with military officials in the region has drawn growing scrutiny.
Senator Tabe Tando, often referred to as a “colonial senator” by local residents, who represents the South West Region in the upper chamber of the French Cameroun legislature. Despite his Ambazonian roots, Senator Tando has consistently endorsed the regime’s actions and is accused of complicity through silence and political cover.
These men are not mere bystanders but alleged architects and legitimisers of a brutal regime that is systematically eliminating its critics, real or perceived.
A Genocidal Blueprint
Sources close to the Government of the Federal Republic of Ambazonia describe the actions of these men as “an extension of the genocidal plan to dismantle the Ambazonian identity by killing its people, silencing its voices, and destroying its villages.” They point to numerous cases across Bui, Lebialem, and Mezam counties where individuals were murdered shortly after being denounced by pro-regime operatives.
In some instances, entire communities have been targeted based on reports supplied by regime loyalists. The perpetrators act under the protection of a military occupation that has no regard for international humanitarian law. More alarmingly, there is growing evidence that this campaign is not a series of isolated incidents, but rather part of a coordinated and politically sanctioned strategy of elimination.
Calls for International Investigation
Legal experts and human rights advocates are calling for an urgent international investigation. “The activities of individuals like Nkonda Titus, and their collaboration with known political figures such as Mengot and Tabe Tando, meet the threshold for crimes against humanity,” stated one legal analyst in London. “The international community cannot look away.”
The Government of Ambazonia has submitted preliminary dossiers to international bodies including the International Criminal Court, the United Nations Human Rights Council, and the African Commission on Human and Peoples’ Rights, requesting the opening of a formal inquiry.
Conclusion: A Nation Bleeds in Silence
What is happening in Ambazonia is not a civil dispute. It is not a localised rebellion. It is a systematic campaign of ethnic and political cleansing, supported by digital propaganda, state-sanctioned terror, and a network of collaborators whose ambition or loyalty has blinded them to human suffering.
As silence prevails in foreign capitals, the question remains: How many more must die before the world pays attention?