Yaounde, 19 March, 2025 / 8:44 pm (ACI Africa).
Religious leaders in Cameroon's English-speaking regions have expressed their readiness to facilitate dialogue between the government and separatists to resolve the protracted Anglophone crisis.
Cameroon’s English-speaking regions plunged into conflict in 2016 after a protest by lawyers and teachers turned violent. An armed movement of separatists seeking independence for the so-called republic of Ambazonia emerged following the government’s crackdown on protesters.
In his address during the Sixth Session of the Follow-up Committee Meeting of the Major National Dialogue in Cameroon’s capital, Yaoundé, the President of the National Episcopal Conference of Cameroon (NECC), who led the delegation of religious leaders from the North West and South West Regions, emphazized that only “genuine dialogue—not force—can bring lasting peace” in the embattled region.
“All wars, including the First and Second World Wars, ended at the negotiating table. The Ambazonians are ready for meaningful dialogue, and we, as religious leaders, can facilitate it,” Archbishop Andrew Fuanya Nkea said during the Tuesday, March 18 session.
Acknowledging modest progress in addressing the conflict, Archbishop Nkea however noted that several areas “remain under the control of Ambazonian fighters, with ongoing kidnappings and killings fueling distrust between the government and separatist groups.”