IN THE BEGINNING WAS THE WORD
When the last presidential election
in Cameroon took place in 2011, over ten opposition candidates stood against
the Incumbent Paul Biya. The latter won. However, of all the country`s
opposition leaders, it is worth noting that one has consistently been in the
lead and stood the test of time since the reintroduction of multi-party
politics in the country twenty five years ago. For that reason, he has become a
household name in Cameroon. He is called Ni John Fru Ndi. In this
analysis, I look at the human face behind the politician.
HISTORY IN THE MAKING
It
is a fact that Cameroon`s modern political history cannot be accurately written
without mention of the the man Ni John Fru Nd, who is National Chairman of the
Social Democratic Front (SDF). In fact, ever since he forcefully launched
the SDF 25 years ago at a time when the one-party state was the order of the
day in Cameroon and the ruling CPDM party led by President Paul Biya was the
only cock that could crow, so to speak, party politics in Cameroon has not been
the same. I therefore feel that for the record, it is worth examining the
history of the man from a view point that is not normally always a
preoccupation to political analysts.
THE HANDLING OF A HOT POTATO
Although
it can be argued that if Paul Biya did not pave the way for a return to multi-party
politics in Cameroon in the first place by taking steps to allow freedom of
expression including the creation of other political parties, Fru Ndi would
never have been able to launch his party, the SDF Chairman must nevertheless be
given credit for taking the bull by the horns and leading the launching of the
party, at a time when talk of a party other than the CPDM was taboo. When he
accepted to lead, many of those who stood with him were unwilling to “bell the
cat”. Some saw him as simply a facilitator who would create the party and then
step aside for them to lead it. But as things turned out, more than twenty
years after, Fru Ndi is still the leader. It has therefore even become
difficult to talk about the party without talking about him.
A PRIVATE MAN
Because
of his long stay in office, it is difficult to now think about Fru Ndi without
linking him to his political party. Yet, before he became the politician he is
today, Fru Ndi was a private man, and even after having become a politician, he
still has a private life. It is that aspect of his that I seek to bring out in
this article. I am doing so from a personal angle. I am talking about Fru Ndi
as I have known him personally.
THE UMBILICAL CORD
John
Fru Ndi and I both come from the Baforchu family of Cameroon. The family is a
group that initially migrated from Widikum and settled in Mezam Division of
Cameroon’s North West Region. The Baforchu family is made up of a number of
villages (gazetted by the state of Cameroon) among which are Mbu, Santa Mbei,
Baba II (in Santa Sub Division), Baforkum (in Tubah Sub Division), Banjah (in
Bamenda III Sub Division), Bassamba (in Nde Division of the West Region), and
part of Ngyen Mbo in Mbengwi Sub Division of Momo. I am of Mbu parentage, born
and bred in Baforkum, while Fru Ndi is from Baba II but has spent a huge chunk
of his life in Mankon Town.
FIST CONTACTS
I
first knew Fru Ndi when he ran one of the most influential bookshops in
Cameroon, at the Commercial Avenue in Bamenda, known as Ebibi Book Center.
Although he was not the only bookshop owner in town at the time, he was
the foremost one, especially among Cameroonians booksellers. He did not only
sell books in the bookshop but also distributed them in schools. I cannot now
remember whether he was the distributor to Sacred Heart College in Bamenda when
I was a student there. However, I do recall that he supplied to CCAST Bambili
in my student days there. I remember that I was a member of an informal group
of students in CCAST who loved Fru Ndi`s English so much that whenever we saw
him drive into the school compound, we would hurry to the administrative
building just to hear him speak English. His choice of words and articulation
were attractive and pleasurable.
COUNTRY REPRESENTATIVE IN CAMEROON
Years
later, when I was working as a journalist at Africa magazine in London, the authorities of the publication
decided to appoint a representative in Cameroon. I proposed Fru Ndi, Managing
Director of Ebibi Bookshop. When he came to London for interview, I was the one
who took him to the Chairman and Publisher of the magazine, Raph Uwechue, who
then called in the Marketing Manager and the Accountant, Tarun Shah. It was a
fruitful meeting.
RED
CARPET TREATMENT
In
the year the SDF was created – but months before it happened, I traveled to
Cameroon and while in Bamenda, I visited Fru Ndi at the bookshop. I was
surprised that the first thing he did was to hand me his office telephone and
ask me to freely call my family back in London, greet them and tell them I had
arrived safely in Cameroon. I was humbled by this gesture, considering the cost
involved in making calls abroad, especially at that time. But I accepted the
offer, after which I thanked him heartily. He told me about the plans to form a
new party. After I asked him a few questions, I was not satisfied and so did not
offer to be part of it. He did not take offence. To this day, I have not joined
his party, yet that has not in any way adversely affected our relationship.
DANCING WITH FRU NDI`S WIFE
Before
I left his office, he informed me that they businessmen in Bamenda were having
a monthly njangi that evening at
Ideal Park Hotel, which was owned by the businessman Patrick Vugah Boyo,
popularly known as “P.V. Boyo”. He asked me whether I would like to come along.
Before I could answer, he said: “Do come along! Be my guest!” So that evening I
was with the cream of Bamenda`s businessmen at Ideal Park. I realized that it
was actually a get-together of everyone who was anyone in Bamenda. As it turned
out, during the socializing part of the evening, Fru Ndi was the Master of
Ceremonies. When he announced those to open the floor, I was further honoured in
that he paired me to dance with his lovely wife, Rose, today sadly of blessed
memory.
WHO WAS ROSE FRU NDI?
Firstly,
she and I were age-mates, having been born in the same year. She used to
call me, “Akamantso”, an expression in Ngemba which means “strong man”. I have
always had a special relationship with Fru Ndi but his wife Rose, was simply a
sister to me. In fact, I considered her my twin sister and whenever I visited
them at home, she gave me first class treatment. Rose indirectly helped to
solidify my relationship with her husband because years later when she was in
Britain and I was in Cameroon and ran out of money, Fru Ndi willingly gave me
money which I later refunded to her back in Britain. For the record, Rose was
born in the Yango family of Santa Mbei (one of the Baforchu family clusters) in
Santa Sub Division. Her elder brother, Francis Yango was a high profile
Anglophone civil servant working in Yaounde, capital of Cameroon, in the
heydays of Cameroon`s first and late president, Ahmadou Ahidjo.
AN IDEAL COUPLE
The
Fru Ndi-Rose couple must have been one not just made by God but one ordained by
him in his bedroom because, speaking now as someone who has studied astrology,
I can affirm without fear of contradiction that the two were highly compatible
with each other. John is a Cancerian (a Water Sign), and Rose was a Scorpio
(another Water Sign). The twelve signs of the Zodiac are divided into four
groups, each of which is governed by one of the four Natural Elements: Water,
Earth, Air and Fire. So, each Element relates to three of the twelve signs. The
third Water Sign that goes with Cancer and Scorpio is Pisces. A rule-of-thumb
in astrology states that when two people come from any two of the three signs
of one Element but not from the same sign, their degree of compatibility is as
high as 85 per cent from the day they meet each other. When two people come
from the same sign, the compatibility drops to 50 per cent because they are too
similar: familiarity breeds contempt. There are times when they will be very
happy with each other but also times when they cannot stand each other. There
is always the undeclared battle for supremacy, with each person wanting to be
boss over the other. But in the case of John and Rose, theirs was the kind that
was bound to be so good it could be said to be paradise on earth. That is the
highest degree from which any couple can start a relationship. That being the
case, the relationship between John and Rose was so intense that they could
communicate with each other without using words. They could also easily read
each other`s mind and know what the other person was thinking and even go
further and solve a problem before it surfaced. Between them, there was an
absolute and perfect union of hearts and minds.
THE EARLY DEPARTURE OF ROSE
When
Rose died, I contacted her husband and sympathized with her. I also wrote some
eulogy that was included in the funeral booklet. I did not – as you would
imagine – fail to mention that “Ma Rose” (that`s how I called her) and I were
age mates. When I arrived in Baba II during the funeral, I found Fru Ndi in the
yard where festivities were taking place. There was the gun firing that usually
characterizes funeral ceremonies in the North West Region. He held a gun and
was standing with some of his children. When I approached him and we heartily
exchanged greetings, he said to me: “I am teaching my children how to fire a
gun!” I felt that was as it should be because gun firing is part and parcel of
our culture. But for Ma Rose, I felt nature had been unkind to her. She had
left too soon, after so many years of going through thick and thin with the
husband, as he faced the ups and downs of daring to create the lone opposition
party in a country like Cameroon.
THE ANECDOTE FROM THE VETERAN ALBERT CHO NGAFOR
A.C.
Ngafor as he liked to call himself was another baron of the Baforchu family and
a bigwig not only in Bamenda but in the North West Province. He once recounted
an interesting story about the SDF Chairman, John Fru Ndi. He was a contractor and
the proprietor of one of the largest private colleges in the region.
Unfortunately, he passed away some years ago. In his life time, he recounted to
me an interesting encounter he had with the SDF Chairman. He said when the
Chairman`s father died and he Mr. Ngafor arrived at the compound, the Chairman
was at the graveside with other people, spade in hand. The Chairman said to him
as he stretched his hand to greet: “I am sorry Mr. Director (that was his pet
name for Mr. Ngafor); my hands are soiled!”. He Pa Ngafor replied, while taking
the spade from him to continue filling the grave: “I am sorry, Mr. Chairman, my
own hands are about to be soiled!”
FRU NDI AND THE STRIKE HE HALTED
Some
three years ago or so, students of the National Polytechnic in Mile 6 Nkwen
took to the street at the entrance to their institution and blocked traffic on
both sides of the road. The reason was that a vehicle had knocked down one of
them and they were demanding the authorities to secure the place with speed
brakes. Tempers were rising and the D.O. for Bamenda III Sub Division came to
the scene but was unable to calm them. Mr. Francis Yong, the proprietor of the
Polytechnic came and spoke to the students to no avail. He then started
removing the pieces of planks the students had used to block the road. When he
removed them and handed them to some of the students standing nearest to him to
put them away, they would pretend to do so but when he was not looking, they
would place them back on the heap further away. Then Fru Ndi arrived, from the
direction of Bamenda, heading towards Bambui. After asking someone what was
going on, he walked straight into the crowd and went to where the ringleaders
were standing. He said something to them, after which he now went over and
started picking up the planks. Not only did students collect them from him and
permanently put them way, they actually joined him in removing them from the
road. In less than no time, the blocked road was once more useable.
FRU NDI AND HIS THOUGHTS ABOUT ME
I
understand from a reliable source that while I was still a journalist working
for the Cameroon Radio Television (CRTV) in Yaounde, Fru Ndi proposed me to the
then General Manager, Prof. Gervais Mendo Ze as Station Manager for the North
West Regional Station in Bamenda. Incidentally, around the same period, The
Former Prime Minister Simon Achidi Achu, also proposed me for the same post to
the then Communication Minister and Chairman of the Board of Directors of CRTV,
Prof Pierre Moukoko Mbonjo. After Chairman Fru Ndi had given his reasons for
the choice to the General Manager Professor Mendo Ze, he is said to have
cracked a joke to the General Manager, by saying: “Although I am asking you to
appoint Tikum Mbah Azonga to that position, I know he is not a member of my
party. He is a CPDM person. But still appoint him because I know he is
objective!” As it turned out, I never got that appointment in the end. But that
is another story.
FRU NDI AS A CUT ABOVE THE REST
I
believe that of all the current leaders of Cameroon`s opposition parties, John
Fru Ndi is still the most credible, despite the dissentions and defections that
have taken place in his party. One clear reason is that apart from the one
election which his party boycotted thus handing victory on a platter of gold to
Bello Bouba`s UNDP, Fru Ndi has come first among all of his peers in all other
elections to date. Some years ago when I was still at CRTV, I covered a rally
of the coalition of opposition parties in Yaounde. We journalists took the
opposition members one by one from where they were sitting and interviewed them
away from the crowd. However, when we came to Fru Ndi, we decided that since he
was their leader, we should interview him where he was sitting. When we started
the interview, Prof. Hogbe Nlend of the UPC became so angry that he hit my
microphone and it fell down as he ordered us: “Allez faire ça là-bas!” Realizing that there was trouble in the
air, Fru Ndi got up and asked us to take him and interview him where we had
interviewed the others.
As
things turned out, shortly after that rally, Fru Ndi pulled out of the
coalition and stood as a single candidate for his party. Interestingly, the
number of votes he got outnumbered those of the other members put together. One
would have thought that after such a clear lesson, the other opposition members
would throw in their weight behind him and form a single stronger party to be
led by him. But they did not. So to this day, the opposition is still a divided
one speaking with too many voices and confusing the electorate.
FRU NDI AS A UNIFYING FACTOR
There
have been calls for Fru Ndi to step down because he is said to have over-stayed
his welcome. Even so, he has not gone. Were he even to go, there is no doubt
that his coming into the field of Cameroonian politics has already greatly
changed the political stakes and landscape of the country. He has helped to
close the gap between Anglophones and Francophones. The proof is that there
used to be a time when his party had more Francophone members of parliament
(and I believe, councilors) than Anglophone ones, which is a hat trick,
considering that he comes from the country`s minority Anglophone part of the
country. Another point is that if the results of a certain presidential
election were not tampered with, he would have won and would have therefore
become Cameroon`s first Anglophone President, just as Barrack Obama has become
the first Black President of America. In politics, nothing is impossible.
CONCLUSION
Surely,
as a politician, Fru Ndi has made significant strides in his career and
undoubtedly, his name has already been written in the golden book of Cameroon`s
leading politicians. Even so, if his ultimate objective was to become president
of the country, ten it is clear that he has not yet succeeded on that count.
The big question is: now that the next presidential election is due in two
years – or earlier if the Incumbent President Paul Biya decides to call early
elections - can Fru Ndi make the long
expected breakthrough?
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