WHAT HAPPENED TO CELESTIMUS BEDZIGUMUS? HE FLED? LIKE A NGONG DOG? A MUT? POOR FELLOW.Re: BEDZIGUI BASHERS Take Note////////Is the CPDM government scared of a real Anglophone seccession?

Mishe Fon,
I take great offence when people CANNOT spell my name. NTEMFAC. That you, suddenly translate into the antics of THESE people who cannot spell my name is understandable...it happens when a seemingly good man becomes a Shit-shiner.
 

 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
The Source of my Strength
Bishop David Oyedepo says, "Christianity is not a religionl. Christianity is a manifestation of the supernatural:  supernatural wisdom, understanding, knowledge, counsel, power-stamina, righteousness-morality, and spirit. I am a born-again Christian, a prophet, a proof and manifestation of that power. I am a vibrant winner, an overcomer, a victor. I can do ALL things through HIM which gives me strength. I lead. I speak wisdom to my generation.




From: Mishe Fon <mishefon@yahoo.com>
To: "ambasbay@googlegroups.com" <ambasbay@googlegroups.com>; "cameroon_politics@yahoogroups.com" <cameroon_politics@yahoogroups.com>; "camnetwork@yahoogroups.com" <camnetwork@yahoogroups.com>
Sent: Monday, February 27, 2012 1:22 AM
Subject: Re: BEDZIGUI BASHERS Take Note////////Is the CPDM government scared of a real Anglophone seccession?

Prophet Ntemfack and Others,
Celestin Bedzigui; with all due respect is not a buffoon. You may disagree with his "Politics" but the guy is an intelligent man. I may not buy some of his political rhetoric but I know he is a smart Politician. Calling your "Opponent" names does not make for intelligent debates. I fall into that trap myself from time to time, but I strongly disagree with you calling anyone a "Buffoon" especially one who is definitely not a buffoon. He might not be as fluent as you want him in English, but his numerous writings in French (like him or not) are sound intellectual material. Chief Bedzigui is a Political Actor in the Cameroon landscape and he is far too sophisticated to be described as a harlequin or a fool.
 
Similarly, there are some of us who systematically bash Dr. Konde Emmanuel either for his "out-spokeness", Graffi Bashing or Intellectual Arrogance...BUT truth be told; KONDE is one very smart intelligent fellow who usually frames the debate and WE surrepticiouslly Follow. Some of us who call him names, know they can never measure up to the guy and even have no locus to criticize an intellectual giant of his calibre. Some even think that it will be humiliating to say that he was a "Mechanic" in an earlier part of his life. To me, that is a sign of greatness; to come from humble beginnings and rise to the top.
Just listen to what some other so-called Phd,s in our midst argue on a daily basis. You will start doubting whether these fellows have ever published any scholarly article to merit a Doctorate.  Others have simply arrogated to themselves for the past ten or fifteen years, titles of "PhD Candidate"...4 Whia???
 
As for me, my own Doctorate was issued to me (By Unanimous Consent) by my "Bambe colleagues" Bicos I be dey Toum merecine 4 Marche Central an,a sef 4 Guarantee Express Bus en route to Douala from Yawinde. When I explained how my Merecine could cure "Montolli", Porch Belle, Kam No Go, Sugar Sugar, Morning Time Feber, GeeCee, Bottom Belle Pain, Woman Moon End Pain, Karangwa 4 BiaBia, Tubakrosis, Elephanth..graasis, Bobbi-Tanap Straight, Tumbu in the Teeth Causing Mop Odor  etc. That is where those my friends would think that I am a real Doctor as the langua was flowing very naturally, and they started calling me Dokta Mishe. That one is a legitimate Doctorate from the People. Even the other day at a conference at the State Department, I "knacked" the damn title of DOKTA to my name Tag and deliberately moved close to Secretary of State Hillary Clinton,s entourage.
When she saw this Hot, Black, Flashy looking guy (me) she said "Hi Doctor Fon, which Organization are you representing?"
Malchance: Wetin I go tok now? I had to come up with something. So I made as if French is my main language. I cleared my throat and put on my best Mishe BomBoy looks: 
"Mme la Secretaire, Je suis de l,Association Camerounaise des Maris battus par leurs Epouses" Ofcourse I knew she would not understand Jack BUT she had talked to a DOKTA from Cameroon. Na All Be Dat.
Enjoy the rest of your weekend.
Mishe Fon
,

From: Ofege Ntemfac <ntemfacnchwete@gmail.com>
To: camnetwork@yahoogroups.com; cameroon_politics <cameroon_politics@yahoogroups.com>; Camerpress Ap <237medias@yahoogroupes.fr>; cacowedaForum <cacowedaForum@yahoogroups.com>; ambasbay <ambasbay@googlegroups.com>; FREE AMBAZONIANS <FREE_Ambazonians@yahoogroups.com>; SDF <cameroons_sdf_party@yahoogroups.com>; sdfmembers <sdfmembers@sdfparty.org>; sdf-forum <sdf-forum@yahoogroupes.fr>; Southern Cameroon <southerncameroons@yahoogroups.com>; Southern Cameroon <scyldiscus@yahoogroups.com>; sceuadmin <sceuadmin@yahoogroups.com>; scmg-noticeboard <scmg-noticeboard@yahoogroups.com>; SCNC-NA (2009) <scncna@yahoogroups.com>
Sent: Sunday, February 26, 2012 11:02 AM
Subject: Re: [camnetwork] Is the CPDM government scared of a real Anglophone seccession?

Vintage conundrum in every overt-covert Master-Slave relationship. The
so-called masters never treat the slaves right and the so-called
masters would not want the slaves to leave-escape..separate. The
problem herein is not the master..the dilemma is this pitiful gung-ho
of slaves who would STILL not WANT TO LEAVE even after they have been
told to GET LOST..in very clear terms..
The latest in point is this clown Celestin Bedzigui who told all
Anglophones-Southern Cameroonians...that..he..Bedzigui..will never
share their values neither will he share the same political space with
them...
THE QUESTION IS MIND-BOGGLING: WHAT ARE SOUTHERN CAMEROONIANS WAITING FOR?
As if..one would want to be caught dead in the same space as a howling
buffoon called Celestin Bedzigui in the first place..

On 2/25/12, Divine Rhyme <hittback@yahoo.com> wrote:
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> SDF HOLDS THE TRUMP CARD IN CAMEROON POLITICS!. "If the SDF is again denied
> victory during this year's parliamentary elections, then I will be left
> with no other option than to join the SCNC," Ndi told members of the
> SDF's National Executive Committee on Jan. 19.
> This statement must have something to do with the CPDM government making a
> complete 360 degree  turn around to accept a Biometric Electoral system.I
> just read this a short while ago even though it seems to have been published
> almost two months ago. If this is true then I am sure the CPDM government
> has at last acknowledged  the fact that the peace of
>  Cameroon is in the hands of the SDF. I have always mentioned that and I
> think I too have been vindicated. The SDF and especially Mr John Fru Ndi as
> an individual has been consistent in his stance against secession even
> though he completely accepts all the grievances as listed by the proponents
> of secession SCNC and Ambzonia. Personally as much as I would have loved to
> see Anglophone Cameroon as an independent country, I still believe that in a
> nation of law, where a democratic political system is in place  a harmonious
> coexistence can be
> forged between Anglophones and Francophones and we can all get along.The
> United states is a far more complex nation than Cameroon and Canada
> combined. It needs only the political will to impose law and order for all
> the two cultural groups of our society to live in harmony. The reality of an
> energised SCNC by an SDF support can be very unsettling to the CPDM
> governmentThe policy of trying to contain the SDF to a status of
> a regional party would have  instead been counter productive to the general
> politics of Cameroon if the SDF makes good on its threats. FEN
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>  HomeSports
> Society
> Politique
> General
> Français
> English
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> Anglophones feel Like a subjugated peopleWritten By:
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> January 27, 2012  |
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> Posted In:  EnglishSociety
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> YAOUNDE, Jan 26, 2012 (IPS) – When Cameroon's President Paul Biya
> announced that the 50th anniversary of the reunification of French and
> British Cameroon will take place later this year, it resurrected bitter
> feelings among Anglophone Cameroonians who say they do not feel like
> equal partners with their Francophone counterparts.
> Jannette Ngum, a primary school teacher from the English-speaking
> Northwest Province, said she would love to never have anything more to
> do with Francophones in Cameroon. In this West African nation,
> Anglophones make up a minority, about 20 percent of the country's 20
> million people, and most live in the country's two English-speaking
> regions, Southwest and Northwest Provinces.
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> Ngum's frustration comes after the shabby treatment she received at
> the Ministry of Public Service and Administrative Reform when she went
> to Yaoundé to follow up on her job application to the public service.
> "When I spoke in English the lady frowned and said 'Je ne connais pas
>  votre patois –la', which literary translates into 'I don't understand
> that dialect of yours.'''
> "Instead of serving me, she continued playing cards on her computer.
> But when a colleague of mine came in and spoke in French, he got what he
>  wanted in seconds. Yet the constitution clearly states that English and
>  French are the official languages in Cameroon, and therefore equal in
> status," she told IPS.
> But Ngum's experience is a common one among Anglophone Cameroonians.
> Michael Ndobegang, a history lecturer in the University of Yaoundé, said
>  that Anglophones in Cameroon feel "reduced from partners of equal
> status to a subjugated people."
> According to Ndobegang, Anglophones have been systematically removed
> from the centres of power, with unwritten laws making it impossible for
> them to hold certain key government positions. Since independence, no
> Anglophone has ever been a Minister of Defense, Finance, Education or
> even Foreign Affairs.
> "Anglophones have been appointed mainly into subordinate positions to
>  assist Francophones, even where the latter have been less qualified or
> incompetent. This is the dilemma of the Anglophone in Cameroon",
> Ndobegang told IPS.
> In June 1990, J.N.Foncha, the main architect of the federal state,
> resigned from government saying that "the constitutional provisions
> which protected the Anglophone minority have been suppressed, their
> voice drowned…"
> Economically, Anglophones also feel exploited. "Cameroon's oil comes
> from the Southwest Provincce. How come the road network in the region
> has been abandoned?" Fru Ndi, the Anglophone opposition leader of the
> Social Democratic Front (SDF), asked during a rally in Buea, in the
> run-up to the October 2011 presidential election in Cameroon.
> He also blasted successive Francophone administrations for killing
> the vibrant economy of the British Cameroons. "Small- and medium-sized
> enterprises in the region, such as the West Cameroon Development Agency,
>  Power CAM, and the West Cameroon Marketing Board have been destroyed,"
> he told his supporters during the rally.
> Ndi, initially opposed to the idea of secession from Francophone
> Cameroon, seems to have changed his mind. "If the SDF is again denied
> victory during this year's parliamentary elections, then I will be left
> with no other option than to join the SCNC," Ndi told members of the
> SDF's National Executive Committee on Jan. 19. The SCNC or Southern
> Cameroons National Council is a secessionist movement.
> Anglophones are also at odds with what they perceive as
> discriminatory practices when it comes to recruitment into the civil
> service.
> The historians, Nantang Jua and Piet Konnings, said that in "February
>  2003, it was announced that there were only 57 Anglophone youths among
> the more than 5,000 new recruits into police academies. The next month,
> records show that there were only 12 Anglophones among the 172 recruits
> into the customs department."
> Years later, not much has changed. Statistics from the Ministry of
> Public Service and Administration Reform indicate that of the 25,000
> young certificate holders recruited into the public service last year,
> less than 2,000 were Anglophones.
> This, the authors say, has created an Anglophone consciousness of
> "the feeling of being re-colonised and marginalised in all spheres of
> public life and thus being second-class citizens in their own country."
> Government though denies the fact that there is an Anglophone problem in
>  Cameroon. Instead, its strategy has been to use state violence against
> secessionist groups. And some of the Anglophone elite have been co-opted
>  into government to down play the existence of a problem.
> But Cameroon's scholar and political scientist, Emmanuel Tatah
> Mentan, has described such elite as "impostors, unrecognised leaders and
>  emissaries of "La Republique du Cameroun."
> Meanwhile, the celebration of the 50th anniversary of Cameroon's
> reunification will take place in Buea, the capital of the southwest
> region.
> "It is just natural; it is true to the history of this country," says
>  Mbella Moki Charles, the Mayor of Buea, of the celebration that will be
>  hosted by his town. But the national communication secretary for the
> SCNC has said that Biya will be attending the celebrations in Buea as a
> foreign head of state. "We have been inviting other heads of state and
> Biya, the president of La Republique du Cameroun, is also invited," he
> told IPS.
> Political Punch, a regional newsletter with SCNC sympathies, has
> called for the president to apologise to Southern Cameroonians before
> going to Buea.
> "For the past 20 years, over 700 Southern Cameroonians have been
> arrested, dragged to court and charged for secession for simply honoring
>  the date of Oct. 1 as a historic and most important date in this
> country," the publication said, revealing that over 100 lives have been
> lost in the process.


--



The thing always happens that you really believe in; and the belief in
a thing makes it happen.




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