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13. Central African refugee Mbororo nomads in Cameroon: Cultural hostages?

  • Adamou Amadou
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Biographies of Radicalization
Ein Kapitel aus dem Buch Biographies of Radicalization

Abstract

This chapter deals with pastoralists who used to be mobile for the purposes of their pasturage needs and then suddenly found themselves (im)mobilized in refugees camps. These people are known as Mbororo, both in Cameroon and in the Central African Republic (CAR). In the 1980s, they migrated from Cameroon to CAR. Their pastoral activities were prosperous, and their relationship with local farmers (mostly Gbaya) was also good. This relationship is based on the exchange of meat from the pastoralists and cassava flour from the farmers. Farmer-pastoralist conflicts were resolved between the two communities, and coexistence continued. The Mbororo integrated into the political sphere when the CAR state created pastoral communes, and some refugees we met in a refugee camp were even the mayors of such communes. Things changed drastically in 2003 when François Bozizé, ex-chief of the army, engaged in a rebellion against his mentor, President Ange Felix Patassé. As the rebels lived in the bush, they relied on the nomads for food and money, both derived from the nomads’ herds. The Mbororo were obliged to sell their animals at the rebels’ orders. In addition, the bush became a prolific avenue for the movement of weapons.With this development, bandits known as zarguina, who used to block roads to extort travellers’ goods and money, changed their technique of operation: kidnappings of children, women, and elderly became frequent and led to the loss of hundred lives and thousands of cattle. The Mbororo resisted, but with the deterioration of the political situation in CAR, they fled to Cameroon. In 2013 the events were repeated with the arrival of Séléka and then Anti-balaka, two opposing armed groups. This chapter looks at these formerly mobile nomads, now (im)mobile in refugee camps, and examines these mobile-immobile groups in their fight to preserve their nomadic culture-whether through resignation to their circumstances, ethnic associations, activism, or means which lead them to radicalization.

Abstract

This chapter deals with pastoralists who used to be mobile for the purposes of their pasturage needs and then suddenly found themselves (im)mobilized in refugees camps. These people are known as Mbororo, both in Cameroon and in the Central African Republic (CAR). In the 1980s, they migrated from Cameroon to CAR. Their pastoral activities were prosperous, and their relationship with local farmers (mostly Gbaya) was also good. This relationship is based on the exchange of meat from the pastoralists and cassava flour from the farmers. Farmer-pastoralist conflicts were resolved between the two communities, and coexistence continued. The Mbororo integrated into the political sphere when the CAR state created pastoral communes, and some refugees we met in a refugee camp were even the mayors of such communes. Things changed drastically in 2003 when François Bozizé, ex-chief of the army, engaged in a rebellion against his mentor, President Ange Felix Patassé. As the rebels lived in the bush, they relied on the nomads for food and money, both derived from the nomads’ herds. The Mbororo were obliged to sell their animals at the rebels’ orders. In addition, the bush became a prolific avenue for the movement of weapons.With this development, bandits known as zarguina, who used to block roads to extort travellers’ goods and money, changed their technique of operation: kidnappings of children, women, and elderly became frequent and led to the loss of hundred lives and thousands of cattle. The Mbororo resisted, but with the deterioration of the political situation in CAR, they fled to Cameroon. In 2013 the events were repeated with the arrival of Séléka and then Anti-balaka, two opposing armed groups. This chapter looks at these formerly mobile nomads, now (im)mobile in refugee camps, and examines these mobile-immobile groups in their fight to preserve their nomadic culture-whether through resignation to their circumstances, ethnic associations, activism, or means which lead them to radicalization.

Heruntergeladen am 29.10.2025 von https://www.degruyterbrill.com/document/doi/10.1515/9783110623628-013/html
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