
'Cameroon over time'
:''This article is about the historical French colony. For the modern nation, see
Cameroon.''
'Cameroun' was a
French mandate territory in central Africa, now constituting the majority of the territory of the
Republic of Cameroon.
The area of present-day Cameroon was integrated to
French Equatorial Africa (AEF) during the "
Scramble for Africa" at the end of the 19th century. However, in 1911 France ceded parts of the territory to German Cameroon, known as
Neukamerun (
Middle Congo) as a result of the
Agadir Crisis, and it became a German
protectorate. During
World War I, it was occupied by
British and French troops, and later
mandated to each country by the
League of Nations in
1922. The British mandate was known as
Cameroons and the French as Cameroun. Following
World War II each of the mandate territories was made a
United Nations Trust Territory. An insurrection headed by
Ruben Um Nyobé and the
Union of the Peoples of Cameroon (UPC) erupted in 1955, strongly repressed by the
French Fourth Republic. Cameroun became independent as the ''Republic of Cameroun'' in January, 1960 and in October, 1961 the southern part of British Cameroons joined to form the ''
Federal Republic of Cameroon''. The Muslim northern part of Cameroons had opted for union with
Nigeria in May the same year. The conflict with the UPC lasted until the 1970s.
Interwar period
After World War I, Cameroun was not integrated to
French Equatorial Africa (AEF) but made a "''Comissariat de la République autonome''" under French mandate. France enacted an assimilationist policy with the aim of having German presence forgotten, by teaching French on all of the territory and imposing French law, while pursuing the "indigenous politics", which consisted of keeping control of the judiciary system and of the police, while tolerating traditional law issues. The colonial administration also followed
public health policies (
Eugène Jamot did some research on
sleeping sickness) as well as encouraging
Francophony.
Charles Atangana, designed
paramount chief by the Germans, and others local chiefs were invited to France, and
Paul Soppo Priso named president of the JEUCAFRA (Cameroun French Youth). Charles Atangana would visit the 1931
Paris Colonial Exhibition and attend the 1935
French Colonial Conference. France took care to make disappear all remains of German presence, and aimed at eradicating any trace of Germanophilia.
After World War II : colonial tensions and beginning of the war
After World War II, Cameroun was made a
United Nations Trust Territory and unified to the
French Union. Starting in the beginning of the 1940s, colonial authorities encouraged a policy of agricultural diversification (
coffee in the west,
cotton in the south). Construction of roads allowed for greater exploitation of
wood. On a total of 3 million inhabitants, the Cameroun territory counted 10% settlers, born there and often here since various generations, and approximatively 15 000 people linked to the colonial administration (civil servants, private agents, missionaries, etc.)
[ Marc Michel, "La guerre oubliée du Cameroun", in ''L'Histoire'' n°318, March 2007, pp.50-53 ]
In 1946, a Representative Assembly of Cameroun (ARCAM) was constituted.
Paul Ajoulat and Alexandre Douala Manga Bell were elected deputies of the
French National Assembly. Some private and public schools were opened, while the best students were sent to
Dakar (Senegal) or France to study in college. The colonial administration also built electricity and water infrastructures in large cities. In 1952, the Representative Assembly became the Territorial Assembly of Cameroun (ATCAM).
The
Union of the Peoples of Cameroon (UPC), an anti-colonialist party created in 1948 and which struggled for unification of both
Cameroons and for independence was outlawed in 1955. A
colonial war then started and lasted for at least seven years, with the
French Fourth Republic leading a harsh repression of the anti-colonialist movement. The conflict found its roots in the opposition between the settlers and the Cameroonese trade-unionists in the cities. After the
Brazzaville Conference of January 1944, during which the
Provisional Government of the French Republic (GPRF) issued several promises concerning progressive
self-rule, the settlers organized themselves in 1945 in "General estates of colonisation" (''Etats généraux de la colonisation''").
A ''Cercle d'études marxistes'' (
Marxist Study Circle) was created by Camerooneses in 1945, soon followed by the creation of the
USCC (''Union des syndicats confédérés du Cameroun'', Union of Confederate Trade-Unions of Cameroon) at the initiative of the
CGT trade-union. Conflicts erupted in September 1945, with the settlers violently debating with the French governor. Members of the USCC were arrested. In 1948,
Ruben Um Nyobé took the head of the resistance movement, under a nationalist and revolutionary program. Nyobé's UPC was at first only the local section of the
African Democratic Rally created in 1946. However, it refused to split, as did the African Democratic Rally, with the
French Communist Party (PCF) in 1950. After some revolts and increasing tensions with the colonial administration, the UPC was outlawed on July 13, 1955 by the governor
Roland Pré, leading Nyobé to enter clandestinity and lead a
guerrilla against the French administration.
Self rule in 1956 and continuation of the war
In 1956-58,
Pierre Messmer, a
Gaullist and head of the ''haut-commissaire'' of Cameroun (executive branch of the French government) started a decolonisation process which went further than the
1956 loi-Defferre (Defferre Act). At the same time, the Fourth Republic was stranded in the
Algerian War (1954-62). It managed to obtain support of
Great Britain in Cameroon.
France granted internal autonomy in 1956, and the ATCAM became the Legislative Assembly of Cameroun (ALCM).
André Marie Bbida became Prime minister in 1957, and
Ahmadou Ahidjo vice-Premier. Despite the requests by
Rubem Um Nyobe, head of the UPC, the new government refused to legalize the UPC. André Bdida renounced in 1958, replaced by Ahidjo, while Um Nyobé was killed by a French commando in the "maquis" on September 13, 1958. Following his death, the UPC divided itself, while competing leaders, verbally in favor of Marxism revolution, radicalized the movement. Starting in 1959, the colonial war juxtaposed itself with a civil war, Ahmadou Ahidjo taking the place of France in the repression of the UPC. The successor of Nyobé,
Félix-Roland Moumié, was assassinated in 1960 in Geneva by the
SDECE, French secret services
[1].
The insurrection continued after the independence, although the UPC had been globally dismantled. The rebellion was really crushed only in the 1970s, with the death in the "
maquis" of
Ossendé Afana in March 1966 and the public execution of
Ernest Ouandié, a historic leader of the UPC, in January 1971.
Estimates about the number of victims of the war ranged around several tens of thousands of deaths, mainly after the independence
[, although some have given numbers much higher (300 000 to 400 000, which excedes the total number of inhabitants of the country of Bamileke, which was the main theater of operation ][.) Despite the efforts of writer Mongo Beti, the war and the harsh repression by the French government has been overshadowed by the Algerian War, mostly because of the use of professional soldiers, the low number of Cameroonese immigrants in France requesting recognition of the crimes committed during the war, and recently the fall of Communism ][.]
Cameroun became independent on January 1, 1960, becoming the Republic of Cameroun. The civil war with the UPC lasted for years afterward.
References
1. Jacques Foccart, counsellor to Charles de Gaulle, Georges Pompidou and Jacques Chirac for African matters, recognized it in 1995 to ''Jeune Afrique'' review. See also ''Foccart parle, interviews with Philippe Gaillard'', Fayard - ''Jeune Afrique'' and also "The man who ran Francafrique - French politician Jacques Foccart's role in France's colonization of Africa under the leadership of Charles de Gaulle - Obituary" in ''The National Interest'', Fall 1997
See also
★ Cameroons
★ French Colonial Empire
★ History of colonialism
★ Algerian War