A damning 1,035-page report by a joint Franco-Cameroonian commission has led to a formal acknowledgment from France of its role in violently repressing Cameroon’s struggle for independence. French President Emmanuel Macron conveyed the admission to President Paul Biya, accepting responsibility for a conflict that caused immense suffering.
The commission, established in 2022, investigated the period from 1945 to 1971. Its findings were unequivocal: France waged a war against independence activists and later supported the brutal actions of the post-colonial government of Ahmadou Ahidjo. The human cost is estimated in the tens of thousands, a grim statistic that France is now officially confronting.
This acknowledgment represents a significant break from the past, where French historical accounts often sanitized the violence of its colonial endeavors. The shift is attributed to persistent work by a new generation of historians and activists, as well as geopolitical pressure from a more assertive Africa. Macron’s gesture is seen as an attempt to mend fences in a region increasingly wary of French influence.
However, the gesture is viewed as incomplete by many, as it lacked a formal apology or any discussion of reparations. For those directly affected and for activists, the work is just beginning. Calls are growing for tangible measures, including the memorialization of victims like Ruben Um Nyobè and the integration of this history into educational systems to ensure it is never forgotten.
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