There are deaths that happen naturally. There are deaths caused by sickness. There are deaths caused by accidents and the unpredictability of life. And then there are deaths deliberately manufactured by systems—slowly, methodically, coldly—until a human being is reduced from flesh and dignity into a mere shadow of himself. That is the story of Patrick Ndangoh.
He was not arrested on a battlefield. He was not caught carrying weapons. He was never granted the dignity of a transparent trial before a competent civilian court in Cameroon. Like many Southern Cameroonians over the years, he was simply rounded up in the darkness of night alongside others in Bamenda and disappeared into the machinery of repression in Yaoundé. That was in 2017.
In the dead of night, Patrick and eleven others were taken away and rushed to SED in Yaoundé—the infamous detention complex many Southern Cameroonians have come to know not as a security institution, but as a chamber of fear, torture, and disappearance. And even within SED itself, there are levels to suffering.
An eyewitness, a co-detainee, has said that Patrick and the others were thrown into the lowest level of SED—an underground bunker without windows, without natural light, without dignity. Buried beneath it like men already condemned before any court had spoken. For weeks, their families did not know where they were. Imagine a wife waiting for her husband to return home. Imagine children wondering why their father has vanished. Imagine mothers, brothers, sisters searching from police station to police station, from barracks to barracks, asking the same desperate question: “Where is he?”
Then, about a week later, a small miracle emerged from the darkness of the underground bunker. A secretly recorded video. A good Samaritan had provided them with a phone, they recorded themselves, and the good Samaritan helped sneak it out. That was how families first discovered Patrick and others were still alive—buried underground in SED like forgotten men. That alone should haunt every human conscience.
Patrick had lived in the United States for nearly twenty-five years. He was a U.S. green card holder. His children were there. His wife was there. Yet even when questions arose from U.S. officials, Cameroon authorities reportedly denied them meaningful access to him, insisting he remained solely Cameroonian in the eyes of the state. But when it came to protecting his rights as a citizen, where was that state? Where was the law? And where was justice?
The answer is painfully visible in the images of Patrick Ndangoh before and during detention. Before arrest, he was healthy, upright, full-bodied, and full of life. Then, take a look, see what years of detention turned him into. A man reduced to bones. A face hollowed out by sickness and neglect. A body that no longer resembled the person his family once knew. He looked like a human being abandoned to decay. And yet, despite his deteriorating condition, meaningful medical treatment never truly came. Mercy never came. Justice never came. Instead, the years dragged on.
He was hastily sentenced to life imprisonment. He appealed. And for nearly nine years, that appeal never received a hearing. Nine years. No justice. No release. No meaningful medical intervention. Just slow deterioration inside prison walls. And on Saturday, May 9, Patrick died. Not because his condition could not possibly have been treated. Not because his suffering was invisible. But because Paul Biya’s regime chose indifference over humanity. They killed him.
And this is what makes the story so morally devastating. Only weeks ago, Pope Leo XIV stood in Cameroon speaking about peace, justice, mercy, and the need for leaders to listen to the cries of suffering people. Many hoped those words might inspire gestures of compassion, especially toward political detainees and prisoners like Patrick held in connection with the Southern Cameroons conflict.
Had Patrick been released weeks earlier or after for urgent medical treatment, perhaps intensive care could have saved him. Perhaps he would still be alive. But mercy never came. The regime did not listen. And now another Southern Cameroonian has died in custody.
From prison itself came some of the most emotional reactions. Sisiku Ayuk Tabe and fellow detainees released a statement that pierced through the silence with pain:
“We extend our deepest, most heartfelt condolences to the bereaved family of Comrade Ndangoh. Your son, brother, and father died a prisoner, but he lived and died a free Ambazonian. His sacrifice is etched into the conscience of our nation.” Then came words even more haunting:
“Arrested for his convictions, he never bent, never broke, never begged. In the darkness of SED and Kondengui, he carried the light of a free Ambazonia.” Sisiku wrote. And perhaps the most damning line of all: “We hold the Republic of Cameroun fully responsible for this death in custody. This is one more count in the indictment of a system that uses detention as a death sentence.”
Another detainee, Abdu Karim, wrote from his own cell: “He died for being who he was, not for something he truly did wrong.” Read that line again. Not for what he did. But for who he was. Those are not merely political words. They are words written by men who themselves remain inside prison walls, watching yet another detainee leave not through freedom—but through death.
And now this is the question that every Southern Cameroonian must confront: How do you witness this and remain neutral?
How do you see Patrick arrested, healthy, buried underground without trial, denied justice, denied treatment, and denied mercy—until he wastes away into death—and still convince yourself that the status quo is sustainable? How do you still believe coexistence with the Republic of Cameroon under these conditions guarantees safety?
Yesterday it was Patrick Ndangoh. Tomorrow it may be your brother. Your father. Your mother. Even your child. Because the machinery that consumed Patrick Ndangoh does not ask whether you are politically active enough. Systems of repression like those in Cameroon survive precisely because most people assume tragedy only belongs to others—until suddenly it arrives at their own doorstep.
That is the lesson Southern Cameroonians must now confront honestly. History has reached a point where indifference itself has become dangerous. Communities survive only when they refuse to normalize injustice against their own people.
Patrick Ndangoh’s death is not merely about one man. It is about what prolonged detention without accountability does to the soul of a society. It is about what happens when prisons become warehouses for political suffering rather than institutions of justice. And above all, it is about the terrifying message this sends to every Southern Cameroonian.:
That your freedom, dignity, and even your survival may depend not on the protection of institutions—but on your collective determination to defend your rights and humanity.
The Pope came and spoke. The world has spoken repeatedly. Human rights organizations have spoken. Yet Patrick Ndangoh still died in custody.
And that reality should leave Southern Cameroonians with a painful conclusion: no outside force will save a people unwilling to stand for themselves. That is the tragedy. But perhaps, for many, that could also be the awakening.
