People are taking to the streets in Cameroon, hoping to disrupt one of Africa’s most enduring dictatorships. The country’s president, Paul Biya, has been in office for more than four decades and reelected numerous times in contests that are not considered free or fair. But the most recent presidential election, held earlier this month, saw tensions spill over after Cameroon’s Constitutional Council once again declared Biya the winner.
Tampering allegations The friction emerged when opposition candidate Issa Tchiroma Bakary claimed victory in the election and urged Biya to concede. But Biya, who at 92 is the world’s oldest elected leader, was declared the winner with 53% of the vote. The council said Tchiroma received 35%. Biya “rejected Tchiroma’s claim of victory and accused the opposition candidate of trying to disrupt the electoral process,” said The Associated Press. Afterward, some “pockets of protests broke out.”
Tchiroma said the election was marred with “vote tampering, echoing civil society groups’ earlier reports of ‘several irregularities,’ including attempted ballot stuffing,” said the AP. Tension eventually devolved into violence, most notably a fire in one of the governing party’s offices.
At least “four people have been killed in clashes” in the country’s economic capital, Douala, while police “fired tear gas” into crowds in Tchiroma’s home city of Garoua, said Al Jazeera. The protesters were also angered by an internet outage that partially cut off web access for the country. Officials blamed the outage on a “submarine cable cut,” but the government also “shut down the internet to suppress demonstrations in 2017,” said Bloomberg.
Test of stability With Biya now declared the winner, he will “extend his presidency by another seven years and lead the oil-exporting nation until he’s almost 100,” said Bloomberg. Most people in Cameroon, where the “median age is 18, have never experienced life under any other president.” In addition to “political stagnation,” Cameroon is grappling with “significant socioeconomic challenges,” as well as “ongoing conflicts” with jihadist insurgency Boko Haram in the north and a separatist militia in the west, said The Guardian.
What comes next “will be a test for Cameroon’s stability,” said Comfort Ero, the president of the nonprofit International Crisis Group, to The Africa Report. Biya’s party has “maintained an iron grip on power,” said Business Insider Africa, and another victory will “carry global symbolism” toward authoritarianism. |