Jump to navigation

Cameroon

Ambazonia's campaign gets a new Scribe

Separatist leader Anu Fobeneh hires Washington lobbyists as conflict with government forces drags on

Cameroon's Anglophone separatist movement, the Federal Republic of Ambazonia, to step up its lobbying campaign in the United States, after contracting Scribe Strategies & Advisors, led by veteran Washington influencer Joseph Szlavik (AC Vol 64 No 11, Succès on K-Street).

Filings with the US State Department under the Foreign Agents Registration Act, suggest that Scribe's work will include 'advising, counseling, and assisting the foreign principal in communication with US government officials, US business entities, and non-governmental audiences', initially for a $10,000 fee. Scribe has one of K-Street's largest clientele of African opposition leaders and governments.

The separatist group's president, Chris Anu Fobeneh, lives in exile in Texas after being declared persona non grata in Cameroon. A former spokesman for the self-declared Republic of Ambazonia, Anu Fobeneh took over leadership of the independence movement in western Cameroon in September 2022, as it appeared to be losing support among southern Cameroonians amid allegations of infighting, corruption and human rights abuses.

Following President Paul Biya's decision in 2017 to send the army to crush peaceful protestors of the Anglophone minority, demands for independence for 'Ambazonia' have mutated into an armed insurrection (AC Vol 59 No 20, Biya's no-change election).

More than 6,000 people have been killed and over 500,000 displaced in the country's northwestern and southwestern regions, where 2.2 million people need humanitarian assistance, while a report by Amnesty International in July pointed to mass killings, acts of torture, rapes, burning of houses and other atrocities committed in the Anglophone regions by the army, state authorities and militias.

However, the string of recent coups across the Sahel and West Africa have prompted fresh speculation about the solidity of the 90-year-old Biya's regime (AC Vol 64 No 18, An iron grip may be slipping).



Related Articles

Biya's no-change election

In the midst of jihadist violence and a separatist insurgency, Africa’s oldest leader stands for a seventh term

The country's 6.5 million registered voters have a chance to end 36 years of President Paul Biya's rule at the presidential polls on 7 October but the odds...


An iron grip may be slipping

The case of a sacked general illustrates how the president's deft management of the military may be faltering

There's a chronic insurgency in Anglophone Cameroon, militant jihadists in the north, and democrats and civil society bodies yearning for relief from rigged elections and suppression of free...


Nairobi needs its fix

Politicians and police show no signs of investigating two people named as ‘drugs kingpins’ by the US government

Although the United States named John Harun Mwau and Naima Mohamed Nyakiniywa ‘drugs kingpins’ and froze their assets in the USA on 1 June, Mwau is conducting a...


A last blast for sanctions

During President Obama's final months in office, he should target sanctions more effectively at the Khartoum regime, argues a Washington lobby group

A new report from the United States-based, Africa-focussed Enough Project proposes that President Barack Obama's government should use a similar range of finely tuned financial and technical sanctions...