France has officially admitted its responsibility for waging a brutal war against Cameroon’s independence movement, a conflict that spanned nearly three decades and caused tens of thousands of deaths. The landmark acknowledgment was made by President Emmanuel Macron in a letter to his Cameroonian counterpart, Paul Biya.
The admission is based on the exhaustive findings of a joint Franco-Cameroonian historical commission. The commission’s 1,035-page report concluded that French colonial forces, and later the French-supported post-colonial state, were responsible for a systematic campaign of violent repression between 1945 and 1971.
This official recognition shatters decades of silence and denial from Paris regarding one of the most violent episodes in its colonial history. The war included the assassination of key nationalist leaders, such as Ruben Um NyobĆØ, and the violent suppression of any opposition to French-backed rule.
However, Macron’s letter stopped short of offering a formal apology or discussing reparations, a move that critics say undermines the gesture. Activists now argue that this acknowledgment must serve as a starting point for a more profound reckoning, including memorialization of victims and educational reform in France.
France Admits Responsibility for Brutal War Against Cameroon’s Independence
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