(ARCHBISHOP TONYE BAKOT)
(In July 2013 Mgr.
Victor Tonye Bakot was replaced as Archbishop of the Yaounde archdiocese by the
Pope. Since that happened, he has gone into silence and virtually out of the
public eye. Today I remember him because while I was a journalist at the
Cameroon Radio Television, I used to cover his events for national television.
The article that follows here is one I broadcast of FOUNDATION RADIO in Bamenda
shortly after his removal, while Station Manager of the Radio. Wherever he is
and whatever he may be doing now, I wish him a merry Christmas and a Happy New
Year.)
The Archbishop of the Yaounde Arch
Diocese Mgr Simon-Victor Tonye Bakot has resigned. In Catholic jargon, he is said to have
“renounced” the post. The noun formed
from the verb, “to renounce”, being “renunciation”.
In a press statement from the Pope in Rome, The Catholic Apostolic Nuncio in charge
of Cameroon based in Yaounde said Pope Francis had accepted the standing down
of the six-year old Tony Bakot. The
release also indicated that the Pope had appointed the arch bishop of Ebolowa –
Jean Mbarga – as apostolic administrator, in replacement of Mgr Tonye
Bakot.
A source close to the Vatican has
précised that the pope accepted the renunciation in accordance with the Canon
402, paragraph 2, of the Code of Canon Law.
The same source held that the appointment of Bishop Jean Mbarga of
Ebolowa as apostolic administrator is, in Latin “Sede vacante et ad nutum
sanctae sedis”, another canonic provision.
However, the Apostolic Nuncio’s statement did not give reasons for Tonye
Bakot’s resignation.
Suffice is to say that he heads the
catholic administrative unit which is not just headquartered in Cameroon`a
capital, but is also the most impactful in terms of weight. The archdiocese comprises a surface area of
5000 square kilometres and three administrative divisions which are Mfoundi,
Mefou and Akono, as well as Mefou and Afamba.
It has a total population of some three million souls.
Furthermore, the Episcopal province of
Yaounde is rich in landed property. It boasts an entire network of schools,
colleges, high schools, bookshops and some thirty dispensaries and health centres.
Despite the absence of an official
explanation for the archbishop’s renunciation, it is an open secret that in
recent years, the authority of the man of God who was made archbishop of
Yaounde in 2003, had come under frequent public scrutiny and questioning.
Archbishop Tonye Bakot has unofficially
been accused of handling church property as if it was his personal
possession. A case in point is the
imposing Basilica at Mvolye in Yaounde, which he is said to have plunged into
debts to the tune of around 5 billion francs CFA. He is also accused of having made the church
through the archdiocese a partner in a transaction with an Estate property
company which he is not said to have treated fairly. Only a week prior to his resignation, the
publication, “La Nouvelle” predicted that the archbishop’s allegedly unclean
dealings with the company had been, I quote, “a series of dirty tricks worthy
of the top feymen of the country”. The
publication concluded that the matter was “an incredible affair which ran the
risk of once more rocking the Catholic Church in Cameroon”.
Another problem the archbishop ran into
was a scandal caused when an internal memo he wrote to one of his priests, Father
Martin Brida, touched raw ethnic nerves.
Brida was a member of the Faculty of Social Sciences and Management at
the Catholic University of Central Africa.
Following the revelation, the archbishop is said to have sacked another
priest of the same Catholic University, Father Ludovic Lado, allegedly for
having been the one who leaked the internal memo.
Unlike Pope Benedict the 16th who
stepped down for reasons of failing health and age, Bakot’s own reasons, whatever
they may be, may not be connected to health.
Firstly, at 66, he is still relatively young. Secondly, ever since he
took over his functions in Yaounde, he has not been known to be dogged by ill
health.
It is significant that Tonye Bakot is
ceasing to be the archbishop of Yaounde
while still alive. His two immediate predecessors,
Archbishop André Wouking and Archbishop Jean Zoa, died in office. So, on a positive note, Tonye Bakot has
broken the unwritten rule of spiritual leaders of the archdiocese to quit in
active service.
To Mgr Tonye Bakot’s credit, he was a
Bassa native appointed to Yaounde in the heartland of the Beti people. When his immediate predecessor, Wouking was
appointed some sons and daughters of the soil protested to the effect that
someone who was not one of them had been appointed to that position. If there was ever such a problem with Bakot’s
appointment, then the pope has finally solved it because Tonye Bakot’s
successor is Beti.
Even so, Tonye Bakot has left lasting
landmarks in the archdiocese of Yaounde.
He was twice President of the National Episcopal Conference of Cameroon. He is a member of the Pontifical Council for
Social Communication in Rome and a leading dignitary of the Catholic University
of Central Africa.
During his homilies at mass, he charmed
the congregation with his mastery of Ewondo.
He started the mass by saying: ‘Ma sug nin-oh’ then would quote sections
of the scriptures such as “Anga bone . . . nti Zambe ngul me se kar na, ma ne
zen, ne enying, mo ne babela” which means something like “ I greet all of you.
Once upon a time . . . God the Almighty
said I am the way, the life and the truth”. He also speaks English and I used
to interview him in English for the news.
Whether Tonye Bakot was pushed or he
jumped on his own accord is now immaterial.
What happens next to him is what everyone is waiting to hear and see.
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