... SWELA was born in a political whirlwind, and was the direct result of re- splintering and reappropriating political space in English Cameroon. The region now harbouring SWELA was and is a colonial invention, branded into various ...
... SWELA was an attempt to unite all the existing elite associations in the South West into one single organisation . Its leadership continually claimed that SWELA was a non- political pressure group , the main aim of which was to ...
... SWELA explained in the declaration, these ethnic or regional grievances contributed to a palpable sense of marginalization among southwesterners that, in turn, explained their political behavior during the first multiparty elections ...
... SWELA II the beginning of wisdom and salvation would seem to be irremediable paranoiac mistrust of Northwesterners . But this graffiphobia naturally and effortlessly widens to include all non - indigenes . But this is where SWELA II ...
... SWELA was an attempt to unite all the existing elite associations in the South West into one single organisation . Its leadership continually claimed that SWELA was a non - political pressure group , the main aim of which was to promote ...
... SWELA Secretary General's Communiqué On UB Strike By Ferdinand Asapngu, Kumba Urban Council Chairman I listened to the SWELA Secretary General's communiqué over CRTV Radio on the Buea University student's protest, and I think the ...
... SWELA was the rise and agitation of the Anglophone " sovereigntist movement " between 1993 and 1995 ( Konings , 1999 , pp . 289-325 ) . SWELA was therefore transformed into a formidable machine for the exclusion of " strangers " ( i.e. ...
... (SWELA). The reactivation of SWELA was announced in March 2000, apparently at the urging of Prime Minister Musonge in the hope of countering the secessionist movement in South-West province led by the SCNC. SWELA leaders subsequently ...
... SWELA is a mere “interest group - a collection of people who try to realize their narrow and particular interests,” the colour of my article would certainly have been different, although the matter, pace and tempo would have remained ...