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UNITED NATIONS
Economic and Social Council
Distr.General
E/CN.4/2005/NGO/253
8 March 2005
English only
COMMISSION ON HUMAN RIGHTS
Sixty-first session
Item 5 of the provisional agenda
THE RIGHT OF PEOPLES TO SELF-DETERMINATION AND ITS APPLICATION
TO PEOPLES UNDER COLONIAL OR ALIEN DOMINATION OR FOREIGN OCCUPATION
Written statement* submitted by the International Federation
for the Protection of the Rights of Ethnic, Religious, Linguistic and Other
Minorities, a non-governmental organization on the Roster
The Secretary-General has received the following written statement
which is circulated in accordance with Economic and Social Council resolution
1996/31. [11 February 2005]
* This written statement is issued, unedited, in the language(s)
received from the submitting non-governmental organization(s).
THE RIGHT OF PEOPLES TO SELF-DETERMINATION
1. In October, 1961 the UN sponsored a federal union between
its former trust territories of Southern Cameroons and La Republique du Cameroun.
The two territories emerged from the German Protectorate of Kamerun, after Germany
was forced to renounce all claims on its oversea territories, at the Peace Treaty
of Versailles. While the Southern Cameroons from the end of World War I was
under the British administration, La Republique du Cameroun was under the French
administration. The new federal union, the Federal United Cameroun Republic
was to become an inter-parliamentary union of two states with equal status,
with each partner in the union maintaining control over its territory, political
and administrative system, culture, educational, legal and social systems as
inherited at independence.
2. Regrettably, the United Nations (and of course, it member
states) failed to implement resolution 1608 of April 21, 1961, which called
for a post plebiscite conference to work out modalities of the federation. Nevertheless,
delegates of the two territories met in July 1961 and agreed on some constitutional
provisions to meet the UN deadline of October 1, 1961 for the establishment
of the federal union. Among the constitutional provisions that emphasised the
equality of the two states there was Article 47(I) of the Federal Constitution,
which stated: “No bill to amend the constitution may be introduced if
it tends to impair the unity and integrity of the federation.”
3. Although President Ahmadou Ahidjo of La Republique du Cameroun,
promised at the UN never to interfere in the Southern Cameroons, he used French
experts to draft a unitary constitution and using all the political power and
taking advantage of the large francophone population he violated the constitution
and his earlier pledge. In a fraudulent referendum, the two peoples were asked
to vote for a unitary state. With troops deployed on high alert, the arrest
of suspects and no campaigning allowed, President Ahidjo got the result he wanted
when 99.9 % people were said to have voted in favour of a unitary state.
4. With this referendum, the UN sponsored federal union was
abolished by Presidential decree. Southern Cameroons institutions were abolished
and the territory was split into two provinces of La Republique du Cameroun.
French Cameroonians were appointed as governors and divisional officers with
the imposition of the francophone administrative system. The two star federation
flag symbolising the union of two distinct states under the UN, was replaced
with one star. Southern Cameroons became heavily militarized. In 1984, President
Paul Biya, the handpicked successor to Ahmadou Ahidjo, by a Presidential decree
completed take over of Southern Cameroons when the whole region came to known
as a country of La Republique du Cameroun. By this move (and that of 1972),
La Republique du Cameroun, a member of the UN and OAU (AU) violated UN Resolutions
224(III) of November 1948, and 2625 (XXV) of 24 October 1970 that forbid the
absorption of Southern Cameroons. From the African perspective, this illegal
act equally violated OAU Resolution AGH/Res.16 (I) Cairo, July 1964 that declared
the non-violability of boundaries inherited at independence.
5. It should also be recalled that the mandate and Trusteeship
Agreements were binding international instruments, which created objective border
regimes. “They defined territory under international control”, and
to define “a territory means to define its boundaries” and a boundary
established by treaty acquires a permanent character.
6. From the League of Nations perspective, it is a fact of
history and international law that there were two separate Cameroons, with international
boundaries, two separate cultures, two separate colonial histories, two separate
Trusteeship Agreements and two separate peoples. The present exercise of sovereignty
by La Republique du Cameroun over Southern Cameroons should be recognized as
a colonial rule. Therefore, decolonisation of the Southern Cameroons is the
central issue. The people of Southern Cameroons cannot loose their right to
self-determination by virtue of the take over of their territory by La Republique
du Cameroun.
7. The people of Southern Cameroons have made constant efforts
to get the regime in Yaounde to negotiate. Unfortunately, such efforts have
been met with arrest, imprisonment, torture, contempt and extra-judicial killings.
The people of Southern Cameroons believe that they are entitled to their own
sovereign state because denial of their right to self-determination would amount
to a betrayal of international law. Self-determination is an integral part of
human rights law with a universal application. Experience has shown that it
is an ingredient of the condition for enduring world peace. Without the enjoyment
of the right to self determination a people forfeit the freedom to exercise
all other human rights and fundamental freedoms, be they civil, political, economic,
social or cultural.
8. It must be understood that, in the exercise of the right
to self determination the problem does not lie with the claimants of this right;
the antagonism, fear and even bloodshed that this right often provokes is consequent
upon the denial of by oppressive regimes. The Southern Cameroons National Council
(SCNC), which is committed to the peaceful restoration of statehood and sovereignty
of Southern Cameroons is labeled as a secessionist movement by La Republique
du Cameroun. Cameroun describes the SCNC as a terrorist organisation to undermine
the image of this law abiding peaceful organisation. The government in Yaounde
has gone to the extent of sponsoring state terrorism to provoke the SCNC into
armed conflict. In such situations, for how long should the international community
continue to ignore the legitimate aspirations of Southern Cameroons –
the only ex-UN trust territory colonized and occupied by another ex-UN trust
territory.
9. UN General Assembly Resolution 1803(XVIII) declares the
“right of peoples and nations to permanent sovereignty over their natural
wealth and resources” and the International Covenant on Economic, Social
and Cultural Rights Human Rights affirms in its Article 1(2) the right of peoples
to “freely dispose of their natural wealth and resources” for their
collective welfare and development. It is only a people who enjoy self-determination
that exercise control over their destiny, control and manage their land and
natural wealth and resources. The oppressed Southern Cameroonians have lost
the control over their destiny, land and natural wealth and resources. They
have been reduced to tenants on their own land and the resources of their land
are exploited and managed for the exclusive development and benefit of La Republique
du Cameroun. Although Southern Cameroons accounts for 70 percent of the GDP,
due to petroleum, it does not receive more than three percent of the investment
budget. Even the roads, airports, seaports, agro industries, among others, that
existed in Southern Cameroons prior to 1961 have all been closed to make the
territory dependent on and subservient to La Republique du Cameroun.
10. In conclusion, the people of Southern Cameroons believe
that their right to self determination is to restore the Southern Cameroons
which existed as a UN Trust territory under the British Administration, became
a self-governing entity in 1954, adopted its constitution (Constitution (Order)
in Council 1960, in 1960), attained independence on October 1, 1961 and went
into a UN-sponsored federal union with La Republique du Cameroun as equal partners.
What La Republique du Cameroun, did to Southern Cameroons is what Ethiopia did
to Eritrea, the consequences of which constitute part of the sad history of
the abusive use of state sovereignty. The people of Southern Cameroons seek
international understanding, support, intervention and mediation to end the
occupation of Southern Cameroons by La Republique du Cameroun.
Source: OHCHR |