Challenging what has been called “polished fiction,” France has officially acknowledged the violent reality of its colonial rule in Cameroon. President Emmanuel Macron admitted French responsibility for a brutal war against independence activists, a truth long suppressed in official French historical narratives.
The admission is the result of a joint Franco-Cameroonian commission’s report, which detailed a systematic campaign of repression from 1945 to 1971. The report confirmed that French forces engaged in widespread violence and continued to support a repressive state apparatus even after Cameroon became independent, leading to the deaths of tens of thousands.
This move comes as a new generation of historians and activists, many from former colonies, successfully deconstruct the sanitized versions of France’s colonial past. Macron’s presidency has been marked by several such gestures, which are seen as responses to growing pressure and a desire to reshape France’s image in Africa amidst a wave of anti-French sentiment.
While the acknowledgment is a milestone, it is also being criticized as a partial measure. Macron did not offer an apology or propose reparations, which many see as essential for genuine reconciliation. The path forward, according to figures like commission co-head Blick Bassy, involves memorializing victims, locating mass graves, and embedding this history into the educational mainstream.
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