Re: [cameroon_politics] Time to Show Tough Love to Fru Ndi - SDF DEMISE

Thank you, Mr Ebai.
About time someone put this observation as succinctly as you have done.
Here we are with a great Window of Opportunity thanks to the PUBLIC
SHOW of Fru Nakedness of Fru Ndi's self-seeking and serving agenda and
instead of taking full advantage of the situation, some fellows are
still one foot in and one foot out!
I exhort all Northern Zoners to let go this Fru NDI version of the
SDF. For this is not what the SDF is supposed to be about.

On 4/27/13, Yahoo! <freesoutherncameroonians@yahoo.com> wrote:
>
> Governor Achu,
> I don't know why those who suppose to propagate our struggle towards total
> and unconditional independence of our
> homeland, are now and continuously supporting LRC's Fru Ndi. If they feel,
> Fon Ncha, Muna, and now, Fru Ndi have
> not done enough to promote our enslavement, let them tell us why they will
> trust Fru Ndi, now. At times, we may be
> accusing others of playing tribal politics, like the case of our brother
> from Eyangatemako, Mr. Taku. I know, the truth
> is bitter, but it must be spoken. Our brethren from the Northern Zone are
> always the first to shout to hell to Mr. Taku,
> not because he spoke the truth, but because he tells the truth without
> blinking his eyes. We should accept that Foncha,
> Muna, and now Fru Ndi have betrayed our trust and until we start accepting
> the truth, then can we forge ahead and see the
> promise land. We can only be one if  we accept the fact that our leaders
> have failed us and we should correct those errors
> and liberate ourselves. If some of our brothers from the Northern Zone think
> that their contuous allegiance to Fru Ndi,
> hence continuous enslavement in LRC is the best option, then I think they
> will never learn from the failures of their past
> and current leaders.
>
> Anderson Ebai.
>
>
> ________________________________
> From: George Achu <gamya39@yahoo.com>
> To: "cameroon_politics@yahoogroups.com" <cameroon_politics@yahoogroups.com>
>
> Cc: "cameroon_politics@yahoogroups.com" <cameroon_politics@yahoogroups.com>
>
> Sent: Saturday, April 27, 2013 10:53 AM
> Subject: Re: [cameroon_politics] Time to Show Tough Love to Fru Ndi - SDF
> DEMISE
>
> DEMISE OF THE SDF: THE OTHER SIDE OF THE COIN
> Southern Cameroonians/Ambazonians do not seem to learn any lessons from
> history, domestic and International. Why are they moaning and worrying about
> the SDF, a political party in an annexed territory, nay state, that has for
> two decades been mainly an instrument used to legitimize and consolidate the
> colonization of their territory? Is its conduct different from that of the
> Vichy Regime during the German occupation of France during World War II? Has
> the SDF ever taken a public position on the African Union attempts in 2009
> to end the occupation ...... by dialogue or mediation as well as on the
> persecution of Southern Cameroons restorationists?Consequently, has the SDF
> not been the main obstacle and a distraction to the restoration struggle of
> the people of the state of Southern Cameroons? Would it have made any
> difference if the SDF won the sham senate elections in the occupied state -
> even countrywide? Therefore, is it clear why the occupiers
> characterize citizens of Southern Cameroons as Anglophones, even
> Anglo-fools? Tough love to the SDF and its life president who two decades
> ago were believed to be the Messiahs of the people of the Cameroons! The
> demise of the SDF may turn out to be a blessing in disguise - for all the
> people of the Cameroons striving to rid themselves of colonization and
> autocracy. Yes, for all freedom loving people.
> George Achu
> Sent from my iPad
> On Apr 26, 2013, at 5:03 PM, Pa Fru Ndeh <PaFruNdeh@YAHOO.COM> wrote:
>
>>
>>
>>Dear Mr. Bens Awaah:
>>
>>What you have written about the Chairman is quite accurate.
>>However, don't you realize that he has torn down the institutional
>> structures that were built around
>>the party to safeguard in-house dictatorship?  That is why the
>> thinking-heads pulled back. The hounding
>>dogs are all gone.  And now since he is left alone, he does not realize his
>> own faultlines.  How can he?
>>Those who stood tall to try to maintain the institutional structures were
>> berated as being anti-Fru Ndi.
>>They were dealt the 8.2 knock-out blow.  So yes, the thinking heads are
>> also to blame.
>>
>>Let me tell you something.  SDF is NOW owned by Fru Ndi contrary to what he
>> himself may be thinking today.
>>SDF is owned by THE PEOPLE.  The PEOPLE will soon take back their party,
>> because for about 5 years or so now, the Chairman has held the party
>> hostage..  He ought to have been gone from that position since the death
>> of his wife, for PERSONAL REASONS too ............
>>
>>Bye for now.
>>
>>Blessed Be CameroonPa Fru Ndeh
>>
>>
>>________________________________
>>From: Bens Awaah <benawaah@hotmail.com>
>>To: Cameroon Politics <cameroon_politics@yahoogroups.com>
>>Sent: Friday, April 26, 2013 4:56 PM
>>Subject: RE: [cameroon_politics] Time to Show Tough Love to Fru Ndi
>>
>>
>>The story goes that on that positively fateful date in 1989, in a strategy
>> meeting in preparation for the public launching of the Social Democratic
>> Front (SDF) party, somewhere unknown to the Bamenda and Cameroon public,
>> when the crucial moment came, the great question was asked; who wants to
>> be leader of this movement? All the actors remained mute, expecting the
>> other to take up the mantle of leadership with all the challenges, risks
>> and dangers entailed. Eventually, Ni John Fru Ndi stuck his neck out and
>> accepted the responsibility, plunging himself into the position. The rest
>> has been periods of great euphoria, numerous achievements and some
>> setbacks. Who is to blame for the backward slide? Is it solely Ni John Fru
>> Ndi or everyone including the SDF party actors and the ruling party with
>> its Machiavellian politicalpractices? My position is, it does not matter
>> which individual or group of individuals is to blame, ultimately, the
>> people who make up
> the given group are responsible for the kind of leadership they have, good
> or bad. This goes for the members of the SDF general assembly as pertains to
> the party's leadership or the Cameroon electorate in regard to the national
> leadership.
>>I am yet to be convinced that Ni John Fru Ndi is singularly responsible for
>> whatever political ills have befallen the party, therefore, responsible
>> for the failure of the political opposition in Cameroon.  Since he became
>> active in Cameroon politics, he has never stopped fighting for the people
>> and for the advancement of democracy in Cameroon.  His party has tried
>> many political tactics ranging from demonstrations, "Ghost Town", law
>> suits, election boycotts to petitioning the International Community. Some
>> of these tactics have been sabotaged by coalition partners, condemned by
>> naysayers and ignored by the International Community and yet, some legal
>> battles have been won, but the ruling government has conveniently failed
>> to implement them as expected. It is easy to blame, but difficult to
>> consider the complexity of the situation before making pronouncements.
>>In yesteryears, when things got tough, many upper level party operatives
>> who would have helped rebuild the party, jumped ship or abandoned the
>> party for greener pastures. Some returned to the ruling government payroll
>> as professors or civil servants. Others are overseas, having used the
>> party to achieve legal status and now living comfortably. Their main
>> function now is to constantly criticize Ni John Fru Ndi and the SDF
>> without putting forward any credible alternative.
>>How can these people positively influence party matters while outside the
>> country? They should be engaging the party back home in a constructive way
>> instead of joining the drumbeat of asking for Ni John Fru Ndi's head. For
>> instance, they could support the party financially. They could invite the
>> party's leadership to meet them in London, Vienna, Washington D.C., New
>> York, Los Angeles, Minneapolis, Atlanta or Paris to brainstorm on how to
>> improve the party's operation. When any of them goes home, he/she should
>> make it a point to seek audience with Ni John Fru Ndi and the party
>> leaders to talk about the party. It is wrong to detach oneself from the
>> party only to engage in constant, relentless destructive criticism or
>> scapegoating an individual.
>>What is the role of the people at home? As I have alluded to above, the
>> people have the final say on who leads or rules them. Every year, some
>> individuals call for the ouster of NJ John Fru Ndi as SDF Chairman. Every
>> general assembly election session, he has been reelected overwhelmingly?
>> Why is this so? I submit that at every one of the past sessions, the
>> people have evaluated his qualification to continue as party
>> chairman among others, if any, and concluded that his leadership is still
>> better than that of every other contender, hence his reelections. Let us
>> remind ourselves that Ni John Fru Ndi has never assumed leadership by
>> fiat. He has always been elected democratically to the position of party
>> Chairman. It is ironic that critics have not offered credible candidates
>> to stand for elections and take over, but only enjoy calling for him to
>> step down. If he steps down today, leaving the party leaderless, what
>> happens? He has labored so hard for
> this party that he cannot afford to let it down. He is there by the
> people's permission through the electoral process. He has hung in there
> through thick and thin. Give SDF members a qualified replacement and he may
> step down.
>>Until there is a clear qualified replacement to him, I will continue to
>> hold this view point.
>>Don't get me wrong; I agree with the concept of tough love. However, when
>> dishing out tough love, one must be closely involved with the receiver.
>> The most effective tough love is given in private in the company of those
>> intimately involved in the subject matter with the recipient(s) - in the
>> case of Ni John Fru Ndi (SDF), he and the party leadership. When tough
>> love is given in public, it necessarily solicits defensiveness from the
>> receiver(s) and would not precipitate change and progress. That is not
>> what we really want. Calling for him to resign without preparing the way
>> for a smooth transition is advocating for a colossal disaster. Southern
>> Cameroons' independence is still on the table.
>>Awaah     "Permit Yourself to Learn to Forgive to be Forgiven"
>>               B.U. Awaah
>>>>>>>>
>
>>
>>
>>________________________________
>>To: cameroon_politics@yahoogroups.com CC: camnetwork@yahoogroups.com From:
>> Enow007@yahoo.com Date: Fri, 26 Apr 2013 13:04:01 -0700 Subject: Re:
>> [cameroon_politics] Time to Show Tough Love to Fru Ndi
>>Dear Mr. Boh,
>>This is tough love indeed. Some amongst us had to go too low to purge
>> ourselves of the anger developed by Pa Fru Ndi's selfish and egoistic
>> 'politiking.' While most of us have the tendencies to analyze political
>> situations to suit our emotional and selfish needs,this is an objective
>> analysis.In a Cameroon where only heroes and villains exists,permit say
>> this one is in the middle.
>>Only a thin-skinned fool will dispute the fact that Ni John Fru Ndi's
>> extended stay at the helm of the SDF has harmed the party a lot.
>>
>>For starters,the SDF was a revolutionary party,created to champion the
>> interests of the marginalized-by this,I mean the 90 percentile left in the
>> cold by the gangsterism and biyarism of the CPDM.Mishe Fon is part of the
>> 90 percentlile,but his good friend and leader of the aborginals (PAAWCE)
>> is unfortunately in the 10th
> percentile...(laughing).
>>
>>Mr. Boh,SDF can came back,because it already has structures in the
>> provinces,but heads must role at the top for this to happen. Mbah Ndam
>> must also move to the reserve bench.As key adviser to the Chairman,he is
>> equally responsible for the demise of the party.
>>
>>The reborn SDF must go back to basics-focus on unifying Cameroonians across
>> region,religion,ethnicity,language,and colonial heritage. Capitalize on
>> winning disgruntled CPDM
>> politicians,farmers,intellectuals,students,workers,the unemployed and
>> underemployed.These are the people that championed the manifestos of the
>> early 1990s.
>>
>>The SDF must continue to stay away from secessionist movements, and take
>> advantage of the fact that Northern Cameroon is still poorer than the
>> South.The North is up for grasps,and a strategic and re-branded SDF can
>> sweep the west,Northwest,southwest,littoral,and the northern provinces.
>>
>>But wait a minute,Biya will always
> steall elections! The only reason why Biya steals elections is the lack of
> collective action from the SDF,which was the only opposition party.SDF must
> go back to its principle of political and social change. Which means only
> political actions like demonstrations,insurrections,and other public
> incitement and collective actions can match Biya's strategy of
> stifling,demoralizing,and misdirecting opposition power. Street
> demonstration has led to the downfall of regimes in Spain,Africa,and
> elsewhere;it can happen in Cameroon Violent responds from Biya will only
> make the SDF strong.
>>
>>Biya made the SDF more popular in the early 1990s than even Ni Fru Ndi
>> himself.It is Biya's attempt to violently suppress a large rally held by
>> the SDF in Bamenda in May 1990 that hardened and popularize the
>> movement.The ghost town (Villes mortes),also popularize the SDF.Only a
>> peaceful revolution characterized by demonstrations,mass actions,riots,and
>> swarms can break the
> regime in Yaounde.The new SDF must re-develop the capacity to champion such
> actions.If that is the path we have to follow to put our beloved country on
> track,so be it.
>>
>>Augustine Agbor
>>
>>The outcome of my life is not more than three lines:
>>I was a raw material
>>I became mature and cooked
>>And I was burned into nothingness.
>>Rumi
>>
>>--- On Fri, 4/26/13, Herbert Boh <herbertboh@yahoo.com> wrote:
>>
>>
>>>From: Herbert Boh <herbertboh@yahoo.com>
>>>Subject: [cameroon_politics] Time to Show Tough Love to Fru Ndi
>>>To: cameroon_politics@yahoogroups.com, camnetwork@yahoogroups.com
>>>Date: Friday, April 26, 2013, 7:17 AM
>>>
>>>
>>>
>>>
>>>Sometime in the coming day or two, the Supreme Court will rule on the
>>> senatorial (s)elections of last April 14. Whatever the outcome, not much
>>> will change. The CPDM will stay firmly in charge. Dictatorship would have
>>> won another battle.
>>>
>>>
>>>It is no surprise.
>>>
>>>
>>>Not much was expected to change. At least, not with the die-hard, "come no
>>> go" CPDM so firmly committed to sabotaging the will of the people. Not
>>> after the SDF crawled into bed with the CPDM. Now we must deal with the
>>> by-product of this act of political incest.
>>>
>>>
>>>Seen from the angle of two monster, laying down together to bring forth
>>> (what else?) a monster, a lot will change. The SDF will never be the same
>>> again. Since its historic launch in 1990, up until and just before the
>>> (s)election to the Senate, the SDF and its leader were "sense pass king".
>>> They had skillfully avoided most political traps set them. Well, no more!
>>> Alas, the SDF may be on a path akin to that of the stupid fly that
>>> follows the CPDM corpse into the grave.
>>>
>>>
>>>Happily, there is an antidote. One thing could change - nay, reverse -
>>> that fate. The SDF leader, Ni John Fru Ndi, can confess his biggest
>>> political blunder and offer up his resignation. For a man who has
>>> committed few errors despite the enormous pressure of the past 20+ years,
>>> this was so monumental Fru Ndi can only survive if the SDF pays the
>>> price.
>>>
>>>
>>>The Supreme Court may yet correct the outcome of the election to ensure
>>> that the "right" (desired) people are selected for Senate. We know from
>>> history that the election result is not the selection result.
>>>
>>>
>>>This means that a senate seat is still possible for the SDF leader... by
>>> (s)election (preferred and possibly now negotiated). It could come about
>>> by invalidating a few CPDM councillor votes in the North West and
>>> inventing a draw that forces a sharing of seats. The SDF candidates in
>>> Mezam and Boyo divisions could, thus, be let into the new "ngumbah house"
>>> Biya is constituting.
>>>
>>>
>>>Why would the CPDM do such a thing, you may be asking? Well, for the same
>>> reason it disqualified its own lists in the Adamaoua and West regions in
>>> the first place. Secondly, Yaounde is not eager to deal with Fru Ndi
>>> (version 2.0), angered by the "Deal? No deal!" kind of "Njangui" which
>>> the CPDM wins "en aller et retour" all the time. Third, the CPDM does not
>>> want the SDF radicalized anew by the ignominious beating it just suffered
>>> at the ballot box at a time of unprecedented campaigns for the
>>> restoration of the independence of Southern Cameroons.
>>>
>>>
>>>But, I digress... Fru Ndi's resignation (the reason I write) would be a
>>> gift... it would be but a little price to pay for the big political sin
>>> of "ssssssleeping with the CPDM". In the absence of getting value for
>>> money, it would be accepted as a decent short-sale offer to help avoid
>>> foreclosure on the entire SDF.
>>>
>>>
>>>Let me be clear. Fru Ndi has proven beyond doubt that he is that
>>> once-in-a-generation kind of politician. He has earned his place in
>>> history and in the hearts of democracy lovers. He has stood tall at great
>>> risk to himself, his family and his followers. I personally saw him offer
>>> to be arrested instead of let gendarmes take me and another of his
>>> lieutenant's from his home while we were under house arrest in 1992. I
>>> can brag that I know him well. I have tons of respect and admiration for
>>> him. In fact, I call him "Pa" (the title for "pater"), not "Ni" (the "big
>>> brother" title any Tom, Dick, and Harry). I trust him like one of the SDF
>>> supporters who at one of our rallies held up a hand-written placard on
>>> one hand and pointed to his spouse with the other hand. The placard read:
>>> "Fru Ndi: Je te donne ma femme"!
>>>
>>>
>>>I love Fru Ndi still but believe that this is when his most intimate
>>> friends must privately and publicly urge him to do the right thing. Fru
>>> Ndi's true friends at this moment are only those who show him tough love.
>>> I do so convinced that I am rendering service to democracy. The urgent
>>> matter at hand is to crucify Fru Ndi or the SDF. I dare say the choice is
>>> clear, but was it not also clear when the people picked Barnabas, the
>>> thief and murderer, instead of Jesus, the Christ?
>>>As Christ is a light to sinners and to the world, the SDF, thanks in large
>>> part to Fru Ndi, was once Cameroon's brightest democracy light. As one of
>>> the strongest opposition movement in the country yet, it still can be
>>> that light. However, if Fru Ndi remains its leader, the SDF will be but a
>>> lamp lit and put under the bed.
>>>
>>>
>>>As some on this forum may remember... there was a time (right?) when both
>>> Fru Ndi and the SDF were considered eligible for political sainthood.
>>> Now, though, neither may qualify to approach the gates of purgatory
>>> (never mind that purgatory was taught "par erreur" by the church). There
>>> is a time to step up and provide leadership to the SDF and a time to step
>>> down and bow off the political stage. You cannot last almost as long as a
>>> certain Paul Biya and yet claim the moral authority to chant "Biya Must
>>> Go".
>>>
>>>
>>>Children who were suckled on their mother's milk at the time of the SDF's
>>> launch and chants of "power to the people" and"suffer don finish" are
>>> turning gray with Fru Ndi still in charge. We have known for a long time
>>> that  Biya's "democratie avancee" means more power to Biya. Now, we have
>>> ascertained that the SDF's "power to the people" really means "all power
>>> to Fru Ndi".
>>>There is a reason why the SDF of 2013 does not have the many political
>>> options that were available to its version of the 1990s. Shit happens. If
>>> you push any dog into a corner, expect one of two reactions. It can let
>>> out a bark... (witness the SDF threat that it will let out the boys,
>>> swinging machetes). Or, you can expect the dog to park its tail in
>>> between its hindsight and cowardly flee (witness the SDF's bending over
>>> backwards to woo the CPDM).
>>>The SDF forgot that it was dealing with a certain Popaul with whom what
>>> you don't see is what you get. The SDF's "grand bargain" with the CPDM is
>>> turning out to be its Waterloo. The man who was once hailed as Cameroon's
>>> political Moses may have ran the SDF into political bankruptcy.
>>>
>>>
>>>It did not happen overnight. Anyone who has eyes to see, had seen this
>>> coming. The SDF has been in a suppressed state of political decay for a
>>> long while now. Accepting the kiss of death from the CPDM was just owning
>>> up to that state of decay. But, while the SDF was simply in a state
>>> of political decline, the April 14 (s)election may set it in free fall...
>>> unless, of course... unless the man who has, indeed, made the SDF decides
>>> not to mar it.
>>>Like Bello Bouba before him, Fru Ndi's political relevance may now
>>> entirely depend on and flow from whatever crumbs the CPDM passes down to
>>> the Lazarus the CPDM has invited to diner. I mean, of course,  outside of
>>> what place he has earned in history books - for better, for worse.
>>>Speaking of crumbs... do not put it beyond the CPDM and the Supreme Court
>>> to correct the April 14 (s)election. If the correction wins Fru Ndi the
>>> vote, the SDF must make the case for its leader not to accumulate posts.
>>> Crumbs are not only a bad thing. Getting to the senate may do Fru Ndi
>>> sone good. An I mistaken or did Fru Ndi act so desperate to get into the
>>> Senate that we may all be forgiven for thinking that the SDF leader must
>>> dream of how nice it would be if electoral fraud could be perpetrated in
>>> his favor.
>>>Boh Herbert
>>__._,_.___
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>> src="http://csc.beap.bc.yahoo.com/yi?bv=1.0.0&bs=(132vnla4e(gid$c36819d2-aeb4-11e2-8feb-9fca89dd9eb2,st$1367010217026430,si$4452551,sp$1705110268,pv$1,v$2.0))&t=J_3-D_3&al=(as$121l6o08q,aid$_7wfVGKL4Js-,cr$-1,ct$25,at$H,eob$-1)">
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