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Cameroon president Biya seeks seventh term

President Paul Biya, the 85-year-old Cameroonian leader who will seek a seventh term on Sunday, has developed an effective system to stay in power despite long overseas absences.

President Paul Biya of Cameroon waving to the camera (Picture by AFP/Getty Images)
President Paul Biya of Cameroon waving to the camera (Picture by AFP/Getty Images)

One of Africa’s longest serving leaders, he has made Yaounde’s Etoudi presidential palace his home since 1982.

“Those who want power don’t last, it’s those who can (rule)” he told journalists in 2015, making a rare remark about his long time in charge of Cameroon.

One aspect of his time in office is the “subtle balance of forces” which Biya has created in the country, in a region where leadership changes are often accompanied by force, according to International Crisis Group’s (ICG) Hans de Marie Heungoup.

Cameroon’s system was “designed so that everyone polices themselves and maintained inter-generational and ethnic rivalries”, Heungoup said.

“No one can move an active (security force) unit without the say-so of the president,” he added, emphasising the importance of the balance between the regular army, the rapid intervention force, and the presidential guard – the last two of which report directly to the president.

The president’s appointment of loyalists to key posts has also assured his long rule.

The speaker of the National Assembly, the head of the army and the head of the state-run oil and gas company are all confidants of the president, and have each held their jobs for more than 15 years.

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The system has been strengthened through “a mix of resigned acceptance and patronage among certain elite leaders who rally behind the regime,” said Fred Eboko, a researcher at the French Institute for Research and Development (IRD).

Biya’s primary motivation since coming to office has been “to stay in power,” he added.

“The system is built on a single individual and this individual is identified with the job,” said Titus Edzoa, a former confidant of the president who was secretary general of Biya’s presidency between 1994 and 1996 and held ministerial posts on several occasions.

“If you try to go against Biya, you’ll be crushed,” he said.

He should know. After resigning as a health minister in 1997 to stand in elections, he was arrested and accused of stealing millions of CFA francs. He spent 15 years behind bars.

Now a free man, he warns that by centring the system on Paul Biya’s personality “not only could the system implode, but so too could the whole of Cameroon” in the near future.

“Whether you want him or not, he’s still human and you have to think of the future,” he said.

“How do you look back on the story of a people dominated by an individual?”

Osvald Baboke, the deputy director of the presidency, wrote in a book published in September that “Biya’s fate seemed pre-determined” and “an opportunity given by God”.

“Being in power for 35 years and standing again, that’s talent,” added Edzoa.

His repeated long absences from Cameroon, mostly in Switzerland or in his home village in his country’s south, have been bitterly criticised.

According to the Organised Crime and Corruption Reporting Project (OCCRP), a consortium of investigative journalists, Biya spent “at least four-and-a-half years of his 35 years in power on private visits” abroad. The Herald.

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