Early History to Independence
Throughout history
the region witnessed numerous invasions and migrations by various
ethnic groups, especially by the Fulani, Hausa, Fang, and Kanuri.
Contact with Europeans began in 1472, when the Portuguese reached the
Wuori River estuary, and a large-scale slave trade ensued, carried on by
the Portuguese, Spanish, Dutch, French, and English. In the 19th cent.,
palm oil and ivory became the main items of commerce. The British
established commercial hegemony over the coast in the early 19th cent.,
and British trading and missionary outposts appeared in the 1850s; but
the English were supplanted by the Germans, who in 1884 signed a treaty
with the Douala people along the Wuori estuary and proclaimed the area a
protectorate.
The Germans began constructing the
port of Douala and then advanced into the interior, where they developed
plantations and built roads and bridges. An additional area was
acquired from France in 1911 as compensation for the surrender of German
rights in Morocco. Two years later, German control over the Muslim
north was consolidated. French and British troops occupied the region
during World War I.
After the war the area ceded in
1911 was rejoined to French Equatorial Africa, and in 1919 the remainder
of Cameroon was divided into French and British zones, which became
League of Nations mandates. Little social or political progress was made
in either area, and French labor practices were severely criticized.
Both mandates, however, remained loyal to the Allies in World War II. In
1946 they became UN trust territories. In the 1950s, guerrilla warfare
raged in the French Cameroons, instigated by the nationalist Union of
the Peoples of the Cameroons, which demanded immediate independence and
union with the British Cameroons. France granted self-government to the
French Cameroons in 1957 and internal autonomy in 1959.
Independence to the Present
On
Jan. 1, 1960, the French Cameroons became independent, with Ahmadou
Ahidjo as its first president. The British-administered territory was
divided into two zones, both administratively linked with Nigeria. In a
UN-sponsored plebiscite in early 1961, the northern zone voted for union
with Nigeria, and the southern for incorporation into Cameroon, which
was subsequently reconstituted as a federal republic with two prime
ministers and legislatures but a single president. Ahidjo became
president of the republic.
National integration
proceeded gradually. In 1966 the dominant political parties in the east
and west merged into the Cameroon National Union (CNU). In 1972 the
population voted to adopt a new constitution setting up a unitary state
to replace the federation. A presidential form of government was
retained, but Cameroon was a one-party state, with the CNU in control.
Ahidjo resigned from the presidency in 1982 and named Paul Biya as his
successor.
Biya established an authoritarian rule and
implemented conservative fiscal policies. Opposition to his regime
endured after a failed coup attempt in 1984, and his critics called for
more substantive democratic reform. An increase in oil revenues resulted
in greater investment in agriculture and education, but the collapse of
world oil prices in 1986 prompted a variety of austerity measures. In
1985 the CNU changed its name to the Cameroon People's Democratic
Movement (CPDM). Following a prolonged nationwide strike in 1990, Biya
ended one-party rule and initiated a multiparty system. In the nation's
first democratic elections, held in 1992, Biya again won the presidency,
but the result was tainted by widespread charges of fraud, and violent
protests followed.
Various IMF and World Bank
programs initiated in the 1990s to spur the economy met with mixed
results, and privatization of state industry lagged. Critics accused the
government of mismanagement and corruption. In recent years the
English-speaking inhabitants of the former British provinces have sought
autonomy or a return to federal government. In the 1990s, tensions
increased between Cameroon and Nigeria over competing claims to the
oil-rich Bakassi peninsula in the Gulf of Guinea, and clashes occurred
in 1994 and 1996. Biya was reelected in 1997; however, his refusal to
allow an independent board to organize the vote prompted the country's
three main opposition parties to boycott the elections.
In
2002 the International Court of Justice (ICJ) awarded the Bakassi
peninsula and certain areas in the Lake Chad region to Cameroon; another
area in the latter region was awarded to Nigeria. The areas near Lake
Chad were swapped late in 2003, and a new border established. The more
politically sensitive Bakassi decision was slow to be implemented, but
after a 2006 agreement transfer of the region to Cameroon was initiated
in Aug., 2006; Nigerian administration of the entire peninsula will be
ended after a two-year transition period.
Biya was
returned to office in 2004 with 75% of the vote. Many foreign observers
called the election democratic, but journalists said the turnout
appeared low despite the government claim that it was 79%. Opposition
politicians and other Cameroonians accused the government of
vote-rigging. Elections in 2007 gave the governing party a landslide
majority in the National Assembly, but the government was again accused
of electoral fraud. In Feb., 2008, anger over fuel price increases and
over Biya's suggestion that he might seek to change the constitution so
that he could be reelected again led to a transport strike and violent
demonstrations in Yaoundé, Douala, and some other urban areas. In April,
the National Assembly lifted presidential term limits.
Source: www.factmonster.com
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