Présidentielle au Cameroun : Nathalie Yamb dézingue Issa Tchiroma
In Cameroon, things are looking good for Paul Biya. The Autonomous National Electoral Commission declared him the winner of the October 12 presidential election, with 53.66% of the votes cast. His challenger, Issa Tchiroma, disputes these figures and warns the Constitutional Council, which is supposed to proclaim the final results.
"If the Constitutional Council proclaims falsified and truncated results, it will be complicit in a breach of trust," declared Mr. Tchiroma, calling on his compatriots to peacefully resist.
"If you agree to play by certain rules of the game, you don't complain in the end."
For Nathalie Yamb, we cannot accept the terms of a game and then complain at the end. "There are people who agree to participate in this electoral charade, go before the people, leave the polls without being able to collect any minutes, and then arrive proclaiming that they were elected. When they arrive before the Constitutional Court, they are unable to provide minutes that attest to their election, and that's when they start to cry foul again about the institutional and electoral charade. It was a charade from the start. If you agree to play by certain rules of the game, you don't complain at the end," declared the Swiss-Cameroonian activist in a video posted on her X account.
"Tchiroma, for 20-25 years he has been the spokesperson, the fierce defender of this regime"
In any case, she continues, whether Biya returns or Tchiroma comes to power, there will not be an ounce of change in Cameroon.
"Tchiroma has been the spokesperson, the fierce defender of this regime for 20-25 years. He left it not even two months ago, claiming that now he is the change. But what change? Two months ago, he was still defending this regime. He defended its worst acts. He took responsibility for them, he endorsed them," Nathalie Yamb charged.
For her, if her compatriots really want change, they would certainly not line up behind the former Minister of Employment and Vocational Training.
"Change cannot be someone like Tchiroma, who embodied, defended and carried this system for 20-25 years," the Swiss-Cameroonian insisted.
Commentaires (0)
Participer à la Discussion