Wednesday, 4 December 2013

Re: Fwd: Fw: [camnetwork] Open Letter to UN Secretary General

Mishe Lucas Fon,

What is this cradle-robbing picture about?

Or, did I miss something?



On 12/4/13, Mishe Fon <mishefon@yahoo.com> wrote:

> IN DEFENSE OF AKOSON RAYMOND

> For crying out loud, Sessekou; don't beat the child and throw him out with

> the bath water. Because you called the guy a few times and had no response

> is no reason for you to kommot all the Tomahawk misiles to destroy him. What

> do you mean you were supporting his candidacy for "Depute" knowing fully

> well that he will not win? Why then were you raising funds for him? So what

> if, like his younger counterpart of the SDF in Wum (who coming from

> Minneapolis, MN, in just three weeks of campaigning, defeated an entrenched

> well funded CPDM hawk), what if our "Internet Akoson, as you call

> him" miraculously won? Would you still be calling him all these dreadful

> names today? Please give the guy a break. It was an experience of a lifetime

> for him and we should be celebrating his youthful exuberance and give him

> necessary advice on the way forward.

> Sessekou Mobutu Ebini, you may have your misgivings NOW about the Southern

> Cameroons, its leaders and their modus operandi BUT the Southern Cameroons

> problem is REAL and will be REALITY until Politicians decide to face it

> squarely. Insulting your perri frère Akoson using the SCNC as the kassingo

> will not make the SC problem miraculously disappear.

> There is more to the Manyu CPDM intrigues, do me I do you shenanigans, back

> stabbing, mean spiritedness...than this unfortunate attack on this young and

> aspiring politician. Why would you ask him what he does for a living or if

> he is still in Yaoundé? That is totally below the belt and uncalled for. You

> are better and too seasoned for this unfortunate outburst on someone who

> could easily be considered your "Political son".

> Mishe Fon

>

>

>

> On Tuesday, December 3, 2013 9:49 PM, Christtmas Ebini

> <christmasebini@gmail.com> wrote:

>

>

> Mr Raymond Akoson

> I see you are writing and responding to your stakeholders, to which group I

> must assume I do not belong. Whatever you want to do with your time is your

> business but I will tell you that I took a chance on you and came out

> disappointed. Before going in for parliamentary elections you should have

> known what you were going up against. To come here and state the obvious

> does not make you exceptional. What would have made you exceptional would

> have been the mark you made or the trail or path you leave behind in spite

> of the odds that were against you. Who are you to even take the posturing

> position that winning a parliamentary seat in the existing Cameroonian

> political culture should be a guarantee on your first try. You come on the

> internet to gain cheap popularity. If you were out gunned financially in a

> local parliamentary in the area of your birth, do you now have the required

> resources to attain independence for Southern Cameroons? Is southern

> cameroon

> independence an easier task? Any Tom Dickinson and Harry can write on the

> internet that they are patriots fighting for Southern cameroon independence.

> Tell us what you are currently doing concretely (apart from the internet

> show off) to free southern cameroon?

> When Hon Paul Ayah came here, we arranged for a meeting with him and the

> North West Fons Council. We listened to him talk and I told him he was

> either very naive or dishonest over his ability to win an election  for the

> presidency Cameroon without working very hard to bring the opposition

> together. To the same group, North West Fond Council, we have received and

> listened to other political opinion personalities such as Mola Njoh Litumbe,

> Dr Chris Fomuyoh, Hon Jean Jacque Ekindi, Professor Asonganyi etc. We do

> this to try to impress on our politicians of the opposition to gather

> strength by working together. I must state here that although the North West

> Fons Council is apolitical and nonpartisan, it has a culture of openness and

> progressiveness to its members in understanding and engaging in serious

> aspects of our nation and community life. As long as Cameroonian so-called

> opposition do not work at gaining critical mass by pulling the numbers and

> the

> population, we will always have people furiously engage in the electoral

> process with no vision or conviction other than taking the gamble to place

> themselves somewhere and when they fail they become righteous preachers of

> the sermon on the mount. What is it that you are discovering after the

> election that you did not know going into the elections?

> I have never met you. All I know about you was your information through the

> internet Many of us have been very saddened over Mr Biya's alienation of the

> Cameroonian youths from the table of political decision making. Our outrage

> was further intensified with the creation of another unnecessary sector of

> government called the Senate and the appointment of old men of 90+ years to

> that organ in total disregard of available and qualified young citizens who

> could effectively serve and develop our country. I had no interest in

> supporting PAP but noticing that you are a young man whom we can encourage,

> embolden and validate and thus embolden and encourage other youths to rally

> and oppose the evil political machinery, I rallied support for you. This to

> me was significant, not necessarily for you to become a parliamentarian, but

> for the fact that we had began to plant a new political seed that we were

> going to work hard and watch  grow. The significance of this

> is the fact that the people I rallied were Manyu people of different

> political persuasions, some even apolitical and some who have not agreed on

> anything but they made contributions because they bought the plan and vision

> I presented to them and were also angry over the marginalization of our

> youths in the political process of our country. I talked to you many times

> on the phone that our interest was not over you winning the elections but

> start with you on a new.path of energizing and engaging young people who can

> be good political leaders.

> After the elections you put out threats to president Paul Biya that he will

> have to face severe consequences if you did not become a parliamentarian. I

> advised you not to make public threats you cannot carry out. Next you wrote

> how you  were going home to southern cameroon when the supreme court

> declared the final results of the election. I am sure you must already be a

> big official in your new republic of southern cameroon since you already

> seem to be already serving as the mouthpiece of southern cameroons. Next you

> wrote another open letter to president PaulBiya asking him to account to you

> on the election campaign money. I am sure he has sent you the full financial

> statements per your request. Now you are on an international diplomatic

> mission with an open letter to the united nations I am sure the Secretary

> General will be contacting you soon.

> Now let me ask you a few questions:

> 1. Do you still live in Yaounde? If you do when are you going back home?

> 2. Are you an active member of scnc, cam, or Ambazonia?  If you are, did you

> write your open letter as the leader of any of those groups or their

> spokesperson? Can any member of those groups  individually engage a

> diplomatic offensive? If you are not a member of any of these groups, have

> you formed your very own group to attain independence for Southern

> cameroons?

> 3. What are you doing now or have done in the past to free southern

> cameroon? Do you any strategies and plans for Southern cameroon

> independence?

> 4. To assure that your writing on the internet is not worthless empty

> grandstanding for cheap and naked popularity, please share with us the

> activities you have in place in Manyu and other areas of the group in

> cameroon for the independence of southern cameroon?

> 5. Are you going to free southern cameroons through open letters on the

> internet?

> 6. How much money did you raise for the campaign and how did you spend it?

> 7. How do you get to your village Bakebe? Are you going to tell the Manyu

> people to join you in the fight for Southern cameroons independence? If they

> could not vote for you for parliament, will they follow you HOME?

> Getting independence for Southern cameroon is not about writing on the

> internet. It is about understanding what the problem really is, effectively

> engaging in a well thought out process and getting the commitment of a

> significant majority of people from both the northwest and southwest. If

> you cannot engage in any process that effectively  brings the people of the

> south west and northwest to agree to politically accept that they want

> independence and will together work towards that goal, then please spare us

> the empty internet activism that we have been subjected to for so long. You

> may just as well be an addition to the political toxins of

> www.activismformob.com.

> You were calling and texting me everyday with urgent request for money but

> as soon as the elections were over, you will not even answer my calls. When

> you wanted money from me I was Sessekou Ebini but now that you are the

> president of the republic of southern cameroon, I am Mr Ebini. Good for you

> and good luck with the independence of southern cameroon. When can we get

> our passports?

> Christmas Ebini

>

>

> -------- Original Message --------

> Subject: Fw: [camnetwork] Open Letter to UN Secretary General

> From: noel ebini <noelebini@yahoo.com>

> To: Christmas Ebini

> <christmasebini@aol.com>,christmasebini@gmail.com,noelebini

> <noelebini@yahoo.com>

> CC:

>

>

>

> On Monday, December 2, 2013 9:27 AM, Jean-Bosco Tagne <jtagne@yahoo.com>

> wrote:

>

>

> Do you understand then why SDF is today only a shadow of himself after many

> saying to be happy that this evil biya paul regime stole the victory of

> Cameroonians in 1992 presidential election?

>

> Same will be happy you did not succeed to be in parliament because our

> beloved country is one and indivisible. Those are the reasons this satan is

> still at the helm of our country and counting...

>

> Good luck Akoson with your "certain point 4". I am surprise you did not tell

> your master fund raiser Ebini...

>

> Tagne

>

> Sent from my iPad

>

> On Dec 2, 2013, at 7:57 AM, "Akoson A. Raymond" <akosonako@yahoo.com>

> wrote:

>

>

>

>>

>>

>>Stakeholders,

>>

>>

>>Rev. Awasom asked a very pertinent question which Mr. Ebini and Dr. Jean

>> Bosco seem to line behind:

>>

>>

>>'...Had you been picked by Paul biya to represent your party in parliament

>> which is la republique would you have written this letter?...' [SIC]. S

>>

>>

>>

>>My

> response: An unrepentant YES! I'd sent the appendix to my manifesto dubbed

> 'Why

> I am Running for Parliament' to a few senior friends who all advised me to

> rethink a certain point 4. Point 4 was one

> of the objectives why I ran 'to press for the immediate resolution of the

> Southern Cameroons problem'. They cited strategy and tact as their reason.

> I

> saw with them and respected their wise counsel. In fact, had I been accepted

> to become MP after PAP victory, and had I

> ever mounted the rostrum of the National Assembly chamber, my first speech

> would've centered on that, PERIOD!

>>

>>

>>I think my

> stance on the Southern Cameroons/La Republique concubinage has never

> changed.

> If there's a foundational problem with the union, it would shame my

> conscience

> should I go to that Glass House and pretend like others. The union MUST be

> rendered LEGAL and made more perfect if Southern Cameroonians so accept to

> continue. This has ALWAYS been my stance and would've been more pronounced

> as

> an MP. Let's face facts – this is the undiluted truth of the Southern

> Cameroons

> issue, pure and simple! Have we all forgotten so soon all those articles I

> have

> been writing and forwarding on these arguments? My recent write-ups go to

> continue and not some new stance after election. Even at rallies, we talk

> about it. I remember a 2012 rally at Kumba where AYAH addressed in great

> detail to a question posed on the union to the satisfaction of the crowd.

>>

>>

>>Mr. Christmas Ebini is a great patriot who went extra miles to ganner

>> support on my behalf. I'd made adequate presence on the field to be

>> victorious. Big bro, civil servants from Bertoua, Yaounde, Edea, Douala,

>> Maroau, Garoua, Limbe, Buea, Kumba, Bamenda etc with SUV cars and billions

>> went to Upper Bayang to fight a small boy. Enow Tanjong alone and Akoson

>> on the field ... just two of them. Guess what would have happened? My

>> campaign was heavily under funded to fight them and their machinery. Even

>> in Mbinjong, the minister bribed all villagers (I have facts) but they

>> still voted PAP. ELECAM and CPDM doctored the results and bribed my

>> polling agents to the tune of up to 700.000 frs. What did you want me to

>> do in such a case? I was ALONE with a few agents I only struggled to

>> compensate for transport fares.

>>

>>

>>

>>I thank all those who reacted to my Open Letter to the UN Sec. Gen.

>>

>>

>>Regards,

>>Raymond

>>

>>

>>

>>

>>

>>

>>

>>

>>

>>

>>

>>

>>

>>

>>

>>

>>

>>

>>------------------------------------------------------------------------

>>"…Time has come, I believe, for our leaders to start training the youths to

>> take over the baton. Effective, efficient and rigorous training does not

>> constitute issuing subservient roles; rather, it involves sitting side by

>> side on the round table for law, policy and decision making and thorough

>> brainstorming on the normative values that undergird progressive issues.

>> Ayah Paul of PAP takes great pleasure in working with the youths. I am

>> proud to work with him..." Akoson A. Raymond.

>>----------------------------------------------------------------------

>>

>>

>>

>>________________________________

>>

>>

>>

>>

>>

>>

>>

>>

>>On Sunday, December 1, 2013 7:12 PM, Howard Njeck <africmove@yahoo.com>

>> wrote:

>>

>>

>>what an Encouraging statement, young Cameroonians like Raymond need

>> inspiration, encouragement and support. These kind of encouragement comes

>> from People Who are intellectually savvy

>>

>>

>>This CPDM bullies should bury Their anger and frustration and allow young

>> people to make mistake and learn from them.

>>

>>

>>Biya's failure is as a result of never venturing for any thing in his

>> youth,"his world view is very limited", so do this his angry internet

>> bullies.

>>

>>

>>"The successful man Will benefit from His mistakes and

>>try again in a different way. "

>>-  Dale Carnegie.

>>

>>

>>

>>

>>

>>Some are even blaming Their weakness On Their own children, what a shame

>>

>>

>>

>>

>>

>>

>>

>>

>>________________________________

>>

>>

>>________________________________

>>

>>Reply ,  Reply All or  Forward |  More

>>

>>

>>

>>

>>

>>

>

>

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