
Paul Biya

Koumpa Issa-Colonial Adminstrator

Louis Eyeya Zanga-Colonial Administrator
Paul Biya and his appointed colonial administrators in the Southern Cameroons, Issa Koumpa and Louis Eyeya Zanga will account for using rape as an instrument of war in the Southern Cameroons.
In 1961, France made the political decision to disobey international law and annex the Southern Cameroons to their colonial territory of la République du Cameroun, where they had already negated any independence the people of that country aspired to with the imposition of slave Cooperation Agreements on a hand-picked surrogate called Ahmadu Ahidjo. This was the beginning of a trend of arrogant disobedience in Africa by France, to the norms of international law and the new world order of de-colonization catalyzed by the sacrifice that the peoples of the world, including Africans from the Southern Cameroons, made in the defeat of Nazism that in essence was the illegal acquisition of territory by force of arms.
Former French Prime Minister Pierre Messmer in his Memoirs, Les Blanc S’en Vont, made it quite clear that French legal experts working with the French surrogate Ahmadu Ahidjo in the early 60s were engaged in the annexation of the Southern Cameroons. DeGaulle, at the same peroid infamously equated the people of the Southern Cameroons as “a little gift to France from the Queen of England,” dispensing the humanity of the people of the Southern Cameroons in a trash can with the turn of a smart phrase that still echoes with each ongoing French crime in Africa. To hell with the UN Charter and instruments of law. The seeds for French arrogance and thuggery had been sowed on the continent, and as Jacques Chirac will say some 30 odd years later: "democracy is a luxury for Africans."


The abolitionist, William Wilberforce would have had a formidable opponent in Kofi Annan. Like his African predecessor Boutros Boutros-Ghali, they’ll suffer the infamy of having been at the controls during genocide galore in Africa: The French genocides in Rwanda and Congo-Brazzaville, and of course the current one in Darfur.
