French President Emmanuel Macron has publicly acknowledged the violence and atrocities committed by France’s colonial forces in Cameroon during and after the country’s fight for independence, marking a rare admission of France’s controversial role in its former African colonies. His remarks came after the release of a joint historical report by Cameroonian and French researchers that examined France’s suppression of independence movements from 1945 to 1971.
In a letter addressed to Cameroonian President Paul Biya and made public on Tuesday, Macron stated that the report clearly showed that “a war had taken place in Cameroon, during which the colonial authorities and the French army exercised repressive violence of several kinds in certain regions of the country.” The French leader said it was now his responsibility to acknowledge France’s role in these events, although he stopped short of issuing a formal apology.
The historical report revealed that French colonial forces targeted prominent independence figures, including Ruben Um Nyobe, the charismatic leader of the anti-colonialist Union of the Peoples of Cameroon (UPC), who was killed in a French-led military operation. It also detailed the mass internment of hundreds of thousands of Cameroonians in camps, the use of brutal militias supported by France, and the deaths of tens of thousands of civilians between 1956 and 1961.
The decision to investigate France’s actions in Cameroon was made in 2022 during Macron’s visit to Yaoundé, following mounting pressure from Cameroonian historians, civil society, and political leaders for France to acknowledge its colonial crimes and engage in a discussion about reparations. While Macron expressed openness to further research and collaboration between French and Cameroonian institutions to make the findings accessible to universities and scientific bodies, he did not directly address calls for compensation a subject likely to remain at the heart of political debate in Cameroon.
This acknowledgment adds to Macron’s ongoing efforts to confront France’s colonial past across Africa. In recent years, he has recognized France’s responsibility in the 1994 Rwandan genocide, in which around 800,000 people were killed, admitted the massacre of West African soldiers in Senegal in 1944, and emphasized the importance of historical truth over silence. However, for many in Cameroon, this latest statement falls short of a full reckoning, leaving lingering questions about accountability, justice, and reparations for the atrocities committed during the fight for independence.
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