(NOTE: This article was first published on my blog, AMAZINGA GRACE www.tmazonga.blogspot.com on the 11th of October 2011.)
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Shortly after the
last presidential election held on the 9th of October 2011 in which
the leader of the PAP party, Ayah Paul Abine, was one of 23 opposition party candidates who ran
against Incumbent President Paul Biya of the CPDM, Ayah published
pictures of women demonstrating at the Cameroon Tea Estate (CTE) for nonpayment
of dues. When the elections were announced, Ayah surprised everyone by coming
fifth among the 24 candidates who vied for the post.
When he published the images, he also pointed out that the
women`s demonstration had been broken up by local administrators. Ayah did well
by bringing this “social injustice” to the attention of the world. However, he
could have gone further. But he stopped short. By reporting the event, Ayah did
the job of a journalist which is to “expose”. He did not do that of the
politician which is to “correct”. Where Ayah erred is that as a politician and
especially a presidential candidate who literally came from nowhere to find
himself so high up on the league table of presidential candidates, he should
have exploited the incident of the striking women to his own advantage. Instead
of just reporting, the former parliamentarian could have acted by either
personally marching up to the regional governor`s office and asking him some
tough questions, or driving to Yaounde to demand an explanation from the
minister in charge. If he did that then he would have been parading a solution
to the public, not the problem.
Right now, Ayah has
tremendous power and political clout which he does not seem to realize. So from
that view point, he is like the proverbial man who earned five thousand francs
a day but lived poorly on only five hundred francs. Ayah after all did
comparatively well in the recent presidential election. In fact, after Paul
Biya with a 77.9 score; Ni John Fru Ndi coming second with 10.7; Garga Haman
Adji coming third with 3.2, it is Ayah who followed in fifth place with 1.2 per
cent. Ayah is to be commended because unlike the other candidates, he is a
first time comer to the presidential race.
From that perspective, Walla Edith
Kabang (popularly known as ‘Ka Walla’) another new comer and the woman with the
best score at the election, deserves some praise for coming closely behind Ayah
at number 6th place with 0.71 per cent of the votes.
Henceforth, it is in Ayah`s political interest to learn that in order to grow stronger in
politics and be able to stand the test of time, a politician should seek to
show what he can do for the people rather than just show that he can
demonstrate that his adversary is ruling poorly.
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