People in Cameroon are suffering and paying a price when there is a solution, says former South African Cabinet minister Roelf Meyer
Says
Roelf Meyer South African former cabinet Minister, cum chief apartheid negotiator
and international peace crusader. This figure's contributions in the peaceful talks and negotiations that ensued in the 80s and early 90s that led to the end of the nefarious apartheid system in
South Africa cannot be undermined in history.
Hear
him, “The
ongoing crisis in the English-speaking regions of Cameroon are largely
surmountable but the government needs to prioritize genuine and inclusive
dialogue as a matter of urgency”.
Speaking
to the press on the occasion of his special visit to Cameroon in April to Pan African
Vision Magazine/ World Echoes Newspaper, he most outlined in the exclusive interview on the need for frank,
open, genuine, honest and sincere dialogue as only way out of the intensified
worsening barbaric conflict in “Ambazonia”
Exclusive Interview in it's Entirety;
You visited Cameroon in April,
your first visit to that country in which an armed conflict currently pits the
Cameroon government against non-state armed groups in the North West and South
West Regions, formerly known as British Southern Cameroons. Is this a sign that
you and your organisation are interested in contributing to end that conflict?
Roelf
Meyer: In 2013, I co-founded In Transformation Initiative in
South Africa to share our South African experience with people and countries in
conflict situations around the world. We have been very successful in
many countries because of interest in the South African experience of how we
changed insurmountable conflict, especially in the late 1980s, into a situation
where we could make a peaceful transition from a dictatorial state to a
democratic state. In fact, we have shared that experience in several countries
around the globe including on the African continent, and recently I was asked
by a well-respected Cameroonian to take interest in the conflict in the
country. Thus, in April, I had the privilege of visiting Cameroon for the first
time; it was a brief visit that lasted a few days in Yaounde and Douala. The
main purpose was to speak about peace building and development in two academic
institutions.
Although
this was your first visit to Cameroon, were you able to take the pulse on the
conflict beyond your speaking engagements in the two academic institutions?
Roelf
Meyer: I had the opportunity while in Yaoundé and Douala to speak
to individuals who have close knowledge of the conflict in Cameroon. I received
a broader understanding of the conflict and what is going wrong. One thing that
struck me was the level of violence that prevails and unfortunately is not known
to the outside world. I think it is important that the international
community take note of what is happening there to try and support a process
that will bring the violence to an end. The unnecessary killing of
people, mostly civilians, who have been drawn into the conflict is unnecessary
and unacceptable. I also tried to get a better understanding of the
underlying factors behind the current bloodshed and unnecessary violent
conflict. You may remember that we experienced enormous political
violence in South Africa before the release of President Nelson Mandela from
prison in 1990, and even after his release. Listening to various individuals
in-between the speaking engagements, I and my fellow Director of In
Transformation Initiative, Mr Junior John, both left Cameroon feeling we could
perhaps draw on our South African and other experiences on our continent and
globally to help resolve the conflict, but we will have to see how the
situation unfolds.
Given
your contribution as lead negotiator with current South African President Cyril
Ramaphosa for the release of Nelson Mandela and the end of apartheid in your
country, do you believe Cameroonians could draw any lessons from the South
African experience?
Roelf
Meyer: I think Cameroonians could draw from the lessons that we
learned from the South African case. Surely, each conflict has its
characteristics and has to be respected for its uniqueness, but certain basic
principles do however apply across country specificities. For example, we
succeeded in South Africa to build a wholly inclusive
peace process; all relevant parties that were part of the
conflict participated in the dialogue and eventual negotiation that led to a
peaceful transition from apartheid to democracy. The second was that we
succeeded in building trust across
the divide that existed. For example, President Cyril Ramaphosa was the chief
negotiator for the African National Congress (ANC), the leading anti-apartheid
movement, and I was privileged to be the chief negotiator for the government of
President De Klerk; and the two of us succeeded in building a bridge between us
first of all – we developed trust between us which was hugely instrumental in
resolving the South African conflict. The third factor is the fact that
we succeeded in taking responsibility and
ownership of the problem that we had to resolve. We
accepted that it was our conflict and we accepted that we had the
responsibility to resolve it. It was a mutual commitment from the opposing
sides to indeed contribute to resolving the conflict such that we also accepted
mutual responsibility for the outcome.
You
were also Minister of Constitutional Affairs, first under President Frederick
De Klerk and later under President Nelson Mandela; so would you say certain
constitutional models are more amenable to guarantee peace, social justice and
human dignity, and prevent conflict? What would be the main characteristics of
such constitutional arrangements in a country like Cameroon with a very diverse
history and culture, and now going through an armed conflict because of those same
factors?
Roelf
Meyer: The three factors I mentioned above are all key in helping
to resolve the conflict in Cameroon. In the South African case, for example,
the one thing that fundamentally helped us to resolve the South African
differences was that we accepted that the future South Africa that we had to
create had to be built on accepting individual rights on an equal basis for
all, to ensure that blacks and whites could live together as equal individuals
in a future South Africa. That was the fundamental factor that contributed; we
did not see ourselves as the black majority and white minority but as equal
individuals, and that foundation is in the constitution that we have today
which was negotiated between the opposing parties. That constitution was
also the main contributing factor to find a settlement in our conflict and help
us to transition from an authoritarian regime like apartheid was to a
democratic government which we have had in South Africa since 1994.
Based
on your experience in South Africa and engagements in many conflict resolution
initiatives around the world, and on your preliminary conversations thus far,
how do you think the ongoing conflict in the North West and South West regions
or what some people refer to as former British Southern Cameroons or Ambazonia can
be resolved?
Roelf
Meyer: Yes, I think it is possible to draw from other experiences
including that of South Africa in addressing the Anglophone conflict in
Cameroon. In my mind, the starting point of the resolution of any conflict is
to establish the basis for talks. It often starts with ‘talks about talks’,
then the real talks, and then you get to a situation of dialogue which flows
into negotiations that address the situation and root causes. If this method
can be followed in the case of Cameroon, it is most likely that the starting
point is there but also a possible path to an acceptable outcome. Time is
also of the essence, and there’s urgency in stopping the bloodshed and further
alienation.
AM: Having
been Minister of Defence earlier in your career, when you compare the situation
you had to grapple with within South Africa, and what obtains in Cameroon
today, what are some of the similarities that you see and how challenging can
it be to get a solution that meets the expectation of conflicting parties?
Roelf
Meyer: In terms of my experience as Minister of Defence, let me
emphasize that I was Minister of Defence after the dialogue and negotiations
already started in South Africa – my task as Minister of Defence was therefore
to lead the process of negotiations within the military so as to address the
issue of integration in the military and the paramilitary of the liberation
movements. That process was started during my tenure as Minister of
Defence and from that experience, I can say some similarities need to be
addressed although there are also unique features of the Cameroonian conflict
in that regard. In the South African experience, we deployed a very
strong military response to uphold the powers of the minority white regime in
South Africa, but this too had to be addressed during the negotiations. We
successfully integrated the different military and institutional forces but
also the paramilitary from the liberation movements. And the day that Nelson
Mandela was sworn in as the first democratically elected president of South
Africa, by his side was the chief of the military of the former apartheid
regime which shows how effective that process of integration and successful
transition took place in the South African case.
In a conflict of this nature
where there has been so much bloodshed, distrust, pain and suffering, divergent
views, fragmented groups, vested interests for some actors on both sides and so
many other complexities, what would typically be a starting point for
addressing the root causes and what other logical steps would follow
suit?
Roelf
Meyer: In my view, the only real solution to the crisis is
genuine, inclusive dialogue, and I can say that from the South African case
that was our experience. We are, based on the South African experience, big
advocates for dialogue as the real instrument to bring about change and to
resolve conflict and I would say for the case of Cameroon, that is what is
required. Looking at starting points, it often has to start with discrete talks
meaning below the radar; only a few people may know about efforts to test the
water and laying the foundation before actually getting into it. That is what
happened in the South African case with some talks taking place between the
apartheid government and Nelson Mandela while he was still in prison and the
same with the exiled leaders of the liberation movements. There were
‘talks about talks’ even three or four years before the actual process started
after the release of President Mandela. Maybe that is something that can help
us to address the situation in Cameroon. I understand that some of that
may already have occurred in diverse forms — the process of talks that could
lead to better understanding, preparing the ground with confidence building
measures, testing the waters and then eventually delving into dialogue and
negotiations to reach mutually acceptable positions for the opposing sides.
Watching the situation from the outside, it seems to me that the conflict in
Cameroon is not insurmountable in terms of seeking a solution, and one has to
address the complexities mentioned one by one and then the result and solution
will follow.
With
your very rich personal and professional experience, should you and South
Africa, which remains a giant on the continent, be called upon to help seek a
lasting solution to the conflict in Cameroon; would you and the country
consider that possibility?
Roelf
Meyer: It is early for me to say whether South Africa or myself can
play a role. I think it depends on how things evolve within the next several
weeks or few months. I don’t think it is opportune now to say outright ‘yes’ to
the question. We must keep in mind that South Africa is a non-interested player
as far as the sub region is concerned. South Africa has not been directly
impacted by the conflict in Cameroon and that is, I think, quite a neutral,
objective, and independent posture as far as the conflict is concerned.
For that reason, it could play a constructive role which also describes my own
position if I were to take further interest in helping the situation in
Cameroon. For now, I would like to wish the people of Cameroon well in their endeavor
to find solutions to the conflict. Like I said, one of the most important
lessons from the South African experience is that we took ownership and
responsibility and, yes, some advisers and people shared their experiences with
us but in the end, we internalized the fact that it was our conflict in South
Africa and that we had to resolve it through negotiations, and that is exactly
what we did.
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