Paris – Cameroon: There is a particular kind of political earthquake that does not announce itself with noise. It arrives quietly, a filing here, a court clerk’s stamp there,  and only later, when the dust begins to settle, do people realize that the ground beneath an entire system has shifted. What Issa Tchiroma did in a Paris courtroom recently is exactly that kind of earthquake. And Cameroon’s political establishment, drunk on decades of impunity, does not yet fully understand what has just happened to it.

Let us be precise about the legal architecture first, because it matters enormously. The Paris Judicial Court operates under the principle of universal jurisdiction — a doctrine in international law that allows a national court to claim authority over crimes considered so grave that they offend all of humanity, regardless of where those crimes were committed or the nationality of those who committed them.

War crimes. Crimes against humanity. Torture. Systematic state violence against civilian populations. These are the categories that trigger universal jurisdiction — and these are precisely the categories Tchiroma is alleging. As lawyer Calvin Job confirmed, the Paris court requires no territorial link to Cameroon. The crimes themselves are sufficient grounds for jurisdiction. That is not a loophole. That is international law doing exactly what it was designed to do.

Tchiroma is not filing a political pamphlet. He is filing two formal legal complaints, backed by what he describes as a detailed investigation — testimony gathered, evidence collected, chains of command documented — linking the atrocities that followed the October 12, 2025 presidential election directly to named individuals.

President Paul Biya. Ferdinand Ngoh Ngoh, the all-powerful secretary-general of the presidency. Senior ministers. Army commanders. Gendarmerie chiefs. Police officials. Approximately twenty individuals in total, sitting at the very apex of Cameroonian state power. This is not a peripheral complaint about a rogue soldier in an Ambazonia village. This is a surgical strike aimed at the command structure itself.

Paul Biya, President of Cameroon faces indictment in a French court over crimes against humanity

Now let me talk about what this means for Cameroon — because the legal case is only one layer of a crisis that is rapidly becoming multidimensional.

Paul Biya has been in Switzerland for nearly a month. The government has tied itself in knots trying to simultaneously deny he is hospitalized and acknowledge he may be attending medical consultations. No return date has been set. No clear picture of his condition has been offered. And in his absence, the machinery of the Cameroonian state sits in an extraordinary holding pattern — because virtually every major pending decision flows from one man, and that man is in Geneva.

The vice-presidency remains unoccupied. This is not a minor administrative detail. The vice-presidency, created by constitutional amendment, is the designated line of succession. Biya has not appointed one. Which means that if his health situation is as serious as the evidence increasingly suggests — and a month in a Swiss medical facility with no confirmed return date is serious by any reasonable measure — Cameroon faces a succession crisis for which it has made no formal legal provision. The constitution has a mechanism. The mechanism requires a functioning president to activate it. And the president is unavailable.

Into this vacuum steps a Paris lawsuit naming his entire senior command structure as defendants in crimes against humanity. Think about what that means in practice. If this case progresses, and Calvin Job is right that it will take time, but time is not the same as dismissal — every minister named in the complaint becomes legally compromised in their international travel, their financial transactions, their ability to engage with European partners and institutions. Cameroon’s diplomatic and economic relationships with France and the broader European community do not operate in a legal vacuum. Indictments, even preliminary ones, have consequences that reach far beyond courtrooms.

And what if Tchiroma prevails? What if, after years of proceedings, the Paris court delivers a verdict that finds members of Cameroon’s government guilty of crimes against humanity? The question is not merely legal. It is existential for the post-Biya order, whatever shape that order takes. A successor government inheriting both a legitimacy crisis and an international criminal verdict against its founding officials would face a reconstruction challenge of historic proportions.

Cameroon has navigated political uncertainty before. It has survived contested elections and constitutional manipulation. But it has never simultaneously faced a president of uncertain health and unclear tenure, an unfilled constitutional succession mechanism, an active armed conflict in two regions, and now an international criminal complaint against its entire senior leadership — all at the same time.

The walls are not falling. Not yet. But for the first time in a very long time, they are visibly, undeniably closing. And the men inside them are running out of room.

 

#Cameroon #PaulBiya #IssaTchiroma #CameroonPolitics #CameroonNews #BreakingNews #AfricanPolitics #ParisCourt #UniversalJurisdiction #ABSNews #Africa #PoliticalAnalysis #InvestigativeJournalism #WorldNews #Leadership

Share.
Leave A Reply

Exit mobile version