Yaoundé, Cameroon – October 10, 2025: With fewer than 48 hours before Cameroon’s presidential election, over one million internally displaced persons—the majority concentrated in the conflict-torn Anglophone regions—confront systematic barriers to exercising their fundamental voting rights. This mass disenfranchisement represents perhaps the starkest indictment of President Paul Biya’s 42-year rule, as separatist lockdowns, reduced polling infrastructure, and security threats combine to silence the voices of those most affected by his government’s policies.
The numbers reveal the scale of democratic exclusion: in the Northwest and Southwest regions, home to roughly 28.75% of registered voters, only 3.73% and 4.76% respectively of new national registrants have been recorded. This dramatic disparity reflects not voter apathy but the systematic elimination of electoral participation in regions where Biya’s policies have displaced hundreds of thousands and killed over 6,000 civilians since 2016.
Annie Nsalla’s testimony encapsulates this crisis. The 23-year-old, who witnessed separatist fighters firing gunshots to deter voters during the 2018 election while she cowered in her bedroom, now faces an impossible choice: “I want to vote, but I do not know if I will vote. We live in constant fear that something will happen on that day. We feel like we have restrictions from both parties”. Her dilemma—torn between civic duty and personal safety—multiplied across displaced communities, represents democracy’s complete breakdown in regions comprising nearly 30% of the electorate.
The electoral commission’s own data exposes the infrastructure collapse. The Northwest, which had 2,300 polling stations in 2018 but saw them reduced to just 74 due to security threats, now operates with 596 stations for potentially 135,974 voters. Meanwhile, opposition candidate Joshua Osih’s complaint that 1,153 polling stations nationwide are located in “legally and materially unacceptable” venues—including military barracks, police stations, and traditional rulers’ residences—highlights how the electoral process has been weaponized to intimidate voters.
Systematic Exclusion and Colonial Continuity
The crisis extends far beyond immediate security concerns to reveal the colonial architecture of exclusion that Biya has perfected over four decades. The systematic disqualification of opposition leader Maurice Kamto, who secured 14.23% of votes in 2018, exemplifies this manipulation. The Constitutional Council’s rejection of Kamto’s candidacy—citing “multiple investitures” by his Movement for the Renaissance of Cameroon party while ignoring similar practices by other parties—demonstrates the calculated elimination of viable opposition.
This electoral engineering occurs against a backdrop of demographic transformation that threatens Biya’s grip on power. Cameroon’s median age stands at 18 years, with over 60% of the population under 25. These young Cameroonians, who constitute 57% of the labor force yet face widespread unemployment and economic marginalization, represent an existential threat to a regime built on gerontocracy and foreign dependence.
The economic desperation fueling youth frustration has intensified dramatically. Cocoa prices—critical to Cameroon’s agricultural backbone—crashed 43% in six months, from 6,840 FCFA per kilogram at the beginning of 2025 to 3,885 FCFA by July. This collapse affects approximately one million people dependent on the cocoa industry, deepening rural poverty while the government prioritizes security expenditure over economic development.
France’s recent acknowledgment of its violent suppression during Cameroon’s independence struggle, followed by continued diplomatic support for Biya’s regime, illustrates the neocolonial dynamics that enable such systematic disenfranchisement. Western powers’ tolerance for authoritarian longevity when it serves strategic interests—particularly in a region facing Islamist insurgency and great power competition—provides the international cover Biya requires to maintain power through democratic facades rather than genuine mandates.
Armed Conflict as Democratic Weapon
The Anglophone crisis, which began with peaceful protests by lawyers and teachers against the imposition of French-speaking administrators in 2016, has evolved into Biya’s most effective tool for eliminating political opposition. What started as demands for federalism and linguistic rights has been transformed through violent government crackdowns into armed separatism, providing justification for the militarization of entire regions.
Separatist groups have responded by declaring total boycotts of electoral processes, viewing participation as legitimizing what they consider colonial occupation. Their enforcement of “lockdowns” and “ghost towns”—periods when civilian movement is prohibited—creates additional barriers for displaced persons attempting to reach polling stations. The Norwegian Refugee Council’s designation of Cameroon as hosting “the world’s most neglected displacement crisis” reflects how this conflict has been allowed to fester with minimal international intervention.
The humanitarian toll is staggering: over 1.1 million internally displaced persons, approximately 480,000 refugees, and hundreds of thousands of children out of school. Many displaced persons lack proper documentation or live in informal settlements with no access to voter registration facilities. UN data reveals that over 60% of internally displaced persons are women and girls, facing additional barriers to political participation.
Political scientist Tilarius Atia’s warning that Sunday will be “a day of ballots and bullets” reflects the normalization of violence as electoral strategy. His observation that separatist groups now possess “sophisticated explosive devices” unavailable in 2018 underscores how conflict escalation serves Biya’s interests by making opposition strongholds ungovernable.
The international community’s response reveals selective engagement patterns that enable such democratic decay. While humanitarian funding covers only 45% of necessary assistance for Cameroon’s displacement crisis, global attention focuses elsewhere. The conflict receives zero points out of 30 for political engagement to resolve it, according to the Norwegian Refugee Council’s neglect index.
As Cameroonians prepare for Sunday’s vote, the fundamental question transcends Biya’s inevitable victory. The systematic exclusion of displaced populations, the militarization of electoral processes, and the international community’s acquiescence to democratic decay represent broader threats to African sovereignty and self-determination.
Eve Suh, a potential first-time voter in Bamenda’s “red zone,” captured this dilemma: “Some of us are trapped. If the lockdown persists, how do you go out? How do we vote? How do you decide who runs this country and potentially stop the violence?”. Her question embodies the impossible choices facing millions of young Africans caught between systems designed to perpetuate elite dominance and their aspirations for genuine democratic participation.
The world’s attention may focus elsewhere, but Cameroon’s electoral charade offers a sobering preview of democracy’s future across a continent where youth demographics increasingly clash with gerontocratic power structures backed by external interests. Sunday’s predetermined outcome will satisfy international observers seeking stability, but the excluded voices of displaced Anglophones represent the unresolved democratic crisis that no electoral manipulation can permanently suppress.