Re: WHAT HAPPENED TO CAMEROON???????????

Barrister Tim

Just know that this Mishe's time is Far (Tam Mfar, he calls himself)
is a "membre du bureau politique; comité centrale, president de
Section hors hierachie es-qualité of the RDPC and distracteur en chef
de la Diaspora. You all those his official titles are in French so do
not count on me to translate them for you. I don't care a damn
translating those RDPC nonsense.

His Champion; massa Paul Biya is eyeing another 33 years in office.
People are already raisyng their heards on the issue here and Mishe;
in that strategic set up is the "distracteur en chef" cummulatively
with his other functions.
Don't say that you are only getting this one from me. Na de Mishe dat.
That is some body to whom I applied to be Treasurer of FECAFOOT and he
greedily said that I was only good to be security officer. Yes, in
that position he knew that he was going to quickly get me out of the
way since the gang that will be coming for the FECAFOOT's coffers will
easily gun me down. Talk to me about cynical people...Machiavelli

Agien Nyangkwe

On 12/6/15, 'Timothy Mbeseha' via ambasbay <ambasbay@googlegroups.com> wrote:
> No, Mishe Fon. I do not know from which constitution of Cameroon you have
> gotten this discovery especially because Cameroon appears to have more than
> one constitution being applied at a time. This is particularly true given
> the fact that the Constitution of 18th January 1996 published in the
> Official Gazette of 30th January 1996 does not say anything about the 1972
> Constitution that was in force until the 1996 Constitution was promulgated.
> That said, this is what Article 63 of the 1996 Constitution talks of
> concerning amendments.:63. (1) Amendments to the Constitution may be
> proposed either by the President of the Republic or by Parliament.       (2)
> Any proposed amendment made by a  member of Parliament shall be signed by at
> least one-third of the members of either House.       (3) Parliament shall
> meet in congress when called upon to examine a draft or proposed amendment.
> The amendment shall be adopted by an absolute majority of members of
> Parliament. The President of the Republic may request a second reading ; in
> which case the amendment shall be adopted by a two-third majority of the
> members of Parliament.
>  That said, I do not believe that Bilingualism is the problem in Cameroon.
> The lack of good will is the problem. The cases you have mentioned (if they
> have any merit) such merit cannot be attributed to the fact that those
> countries are not bilingual. A good number of them are multilingual. Yes,
> Rwanda changed one of its official languages from French to English.
> Interestingly Rwanda did not abolish Ki-Rwanda which is the primary language
> of instruction especially in the Primary school sector.God bless.Mbeseha
>
>
>
> On Sunday, December 6, 2015 1:41 AM, 'Mishe Fon' via ambasbay
> <ambasbay@googlegroups.com> wrote:
>
>
> Did you guys know that the Prime Minister of Cameroon although appointed by
> the President has the powers and can orchestrate a Constitutional
> ammendment?Well, here is what I found while perusing the present Cameroon
> Constitution...and Constitutional scholars can prove me wrong on this.
> Part XI of the Cameroon Constitution, Article 63 states:
> (1) Amendments to the Constitution may be proposed by either the President
> of the Republic or the Prime Minister.(2) Parliament shall meet in Congress
> when called upon by either the President or Prime Minister to examine the
> draft proposed amendment. The amendment shall be adopted by an absolute
> majority of the members of Parliament. The President may request a second
> reading, in which case the amendment shall be adopted by a two-third
> Majority of the members of Parliament.
> My layman's interpretation of this "discovery" is that the Prime Minister
> has Constitutional prerogatives he could lean on to challenge the
> President...if Push comes to shove. The Parliament although with an
> overwhelming majority (including the PM) CPDM presence owes its allegiance
> to Cameroonians who elected them to REPRESENT the People. In reality, these
> Representatives are not in Yaounde solely for their Party or their personal
> bottom-lines but to stand up and support their "Constituencies". If my
> primary residence for example is Yaounde II or Mfoundi, I am supposed to
> have access to my "Honorable Depute" to air my grievances. But if as a Law
> abiding citizen in good standing, I don't even know who my "Depute" is; how
> is he/she then "Representing" my/our interests?I think the problem we have
> in Cameroon is "Citizen participation and understanding of governance. My
> strong feeling is that, this "Bilingualism Thing" in Cameroon is the root
> cause of Political stagnation.
> The truth is: Anglophone culture is diametrically anathema to Francophone
> culture. I am not saying one is better than the other. I am stating for the
> record that we either adopt one or the other system of governance. Mixing
> the two has become a toxic combination that has so far led to a
> desequilibrium and monumental societal failure. Anyone who doubts what I am
> saying should look at the positive socio-economic strides happening in
> Rwanda, Tanzania, Kenya, Ethiopia, Ghana and Nigeria. Rwanda which was
> decimated by Genocide, Wars and other ethnic destruction; has one of the
> fastest growing economies in Africa today. A simple Google search will
> attest to the veracity of my findings. Cameroon was way ahead of these
> countries in all facets of life just a few short years ago. Now see what is
> happening. What went wrong?
> Cameroon is blessed with abundant mineral and natural resources, a vibrant
> well educated youthful population, PEACE, is a touristic haven and much
> more. So I ask the nay sayers...Why is my analysis flawed? And what is your
> solution in levelling the present undulating playing field and come out of
> the present marasmic quagmire of under-development, lethargic Man Go Do
> How..On Vas Faire comment" mentality?
> Honestly, President Paul Biya has tried his best; BUT after 33 years in
> absolute power, methinks he deserves a well compensated REST in retirement.
> I know the main problem is actually the Political machinery around him who
> are completely afraid of the aftermath of the Biya era. Let them have no
> fears of reprisals. Any forward looking new Government should not have as
> agenda "les Reglements de Comptes". They should simply tell Cameroonians how
> they would Govern better and bring Cameroon to modernity...like these other
> African countries are doing. Again, I ask you to look up what the very new
> President of Tanzania is doing within the first 100 days of his
> administration and draw your own conclusions. It is not Rocket Science. Just
> plain GOVERNANCE. Na all dat.Tah Mfar Mishe Fon--
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--
Aaron Agien NYANGKWE
P.O.Box 5213
Douala-Cameroon
Tel. 237 673 42 71 27

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