Sunday 1 May 2016

WHY THE MANGA WILLIAMS ARE THE TRUE RULERS OF LIMBE, ERSTWHILE VICTORIA



COMMUNIQUE
IN RE: THE LIMBE CHIEFTAIN
In pursuance of erstwhile and recent face up levied upon the incumbency of the Manga Williams and geared towards circumscribing the grant of leave for enstoolment, Prince Jerry Nambeke Manga Williams representing the Royal family of Manga Williams/Nambeke do depose for the purposes of  information and necessary action in especial to the stakeholdings of Limbe, and generally to all and sundry the following.
Jesco  and his father Chief Johnaness Manga Williams in London. 

1.  GENEALOGY OF LIMBE
In response to rumours that Limbe hitherto Victoria is other than a parcel dismembered from the Bimbia territory, the following should rest for ever the misguidance. The birth of Victoria now Limbe is stitched to the DNA of the British and German protectorates of the land called Bimbia. The origin and genealogy of the Province of Victoria, now Limbe Division begin when  it became the panacea for the British mission amid the Spanish harassment at Fernando-Po during the 19th century, whereto the British missionaries were stationed as their nucleus for their missionary work in West Africa and in especial for the freed slaves who had made the town of Clarence their home, and the British government as a base for their naval squadron from where their man o’ wars  patrolled the gulf of guinea to disrupt the trade in human slavery which had been abolished in England but was still the main trade in that area at that time. In 1843  the British Missionaries finally lost patience with the Spanish authorities when the Spanish Governor in charge of all the Islands belonging to Spain in West Africa   asserted its long standing claim of the island, planted the Spanish flag at Clarence, renamed the city Santa Isabel and proclaimed the Roman Catholic Church as the official religion of the Island. In 1958 he sent for Alfred Saker, the British Missionary and informed him that the protestant form of worship must cease. Saker then embarked on the task of finding a suitable place in Cameroon. He went to Bimbia and to its Chief, King Bile (King Williams) and negotiated to buy the parcel of land at Ambas Bay and in 1858 King Williams of Bimbia sold that part of Bimbia land to the British missionary Alfred Saker which the latter did acquire against a receipt and christened as Victoria in honour of his Monarch, the Queen Victoria of England. On Monday 09th of august 1858, the Baptist community in Fernando-Po moved to Victoria and held their first public worship on Friday 13th august 1858. Saker then set up a government and  drew up a constitution for Victoria with laws for the proper governing of Victoria, a town council and court for the administration of justice. Albeit dismembered from Bimbia, the British administration recognized the Bimbia traditional chieftain to permeate across the natives in Victoria, the children from some of the coverts at Bimbia, Bota, the emigrants and people from neighbouring villages. He administered Victoria till 1876 when he moved to his homeland for good. He was succeeded by George Grenfell (1877-1878) and Q. W. Thomson (1878-1884).  In 1884 following the 1882 appeal from the people of Victoria to obtain official recognition of their settlement by the British government, Edward Hyde Hewett the British Consul arrived at Ambas Bay (Victoria) and annexed Victoria on the 19th of July 1884, a few days subsequent to the German annexation of Douala and Bimbia on the 14th of July 1884 by Dr. Nactingal the German imperial Governor. The Germans later on in 1887 arrived at a consensus with the British missionaries of Victoria, and secured the purchase of Victoria from the Baptist missionaries who had bought the land from king Williams. The missionaries’ properties including churches and schools were bought by the Basel mission.  The new German Victoria district (Bezirk) eventually moved from being limited to Bimbia but to be included henceforth the whole area of the Cameroon mountain and consequently territories occupied by the Bakweris, Isubus, Wovea, Bamboko and Balong because of the trade exploitation potentials. In 1885 the Germans began exploiting the land and founded (Kamerun Land –Und Plantagen Gesellschaft) in Bimbia and (West Afrikaische Pflanzungsgeesellschaft) at Bibundi. Other concessions would later be procured for plantations across Cameroon. Due to the plantations, natives from the tribes of Bakweris, Isubus, Wovea, Bamboko and Balong became citizens of the German protectorate of Victoria. The original territory of the indigenous Isubu people of Victoria henceforth became blended with descendants of liberated slaves, brought by Alfred Saker, Bakweris from Kie and Mokindi, Wovia,Ngeme villages, bota mainland and island natives, Baongs from Balong in kumba and the Bambokos from Womboko,  who inhabited the opposite segment of the Cameroon mountain to kumba.  The Isubus are natives of Bimbia and Victoria. The Bakweris were natives of Wovea, Kie, Ngeme, Mokindi, Wovia. The Bamboko were natives of Womboko and the Balongs were natives of Balong. This federation of different villages to join the Isubu Bimbia and Victoria was to ease administration of the plantation segments and consequently distinguish from the Buea and Tiko segments. To fulfill their promise to the natives during annexation, the Germans created native courts in all villages to take care of native affairs and the Victoria council was the federal governing body. This was headed by the first King of Victoria, king Johannes  Nambeke Manga Williams. The German Protectorate Government of Cameroon had elected to acknowledge the descendant of King Williams of Bimbia, Johaness Nambeke Manga Williams who would become the first Chief of VICTORIA in 1908. That day, all the federated villages sang the veneration song ‘Manga kinga bosso’ meaning Manga, First king of Victoria. The Name Victoria was changed in parliament to Limbe in 1982 during the reign of His Majesty King Ferguson, son of King Johannes  Nambeke Manga Williams the 1st King of Victoria Province.
2.   GENEALOGY OF LIMBE CHIEFTAIN:
As opposed to claims surrounding the genealogy and locus standi of the Manga Williams’ succession to the last Paramount Chief of Limbe who happens to be a Manga Williams, His Majesty King Bila Fergusson Manga Williams, such that the territoriality should feature in question, may it simply without much ado to unnecessary details be posited of the history which the archives of the nation beholds and every ear and eyes have scoured same.
1908. In respond to the German Protectorate government’s policy making Victoria the new capital of its administration shifting the hegemony from Bimbia, Victoria ceased to be traditionally governed from Bimbia by Mbimbi Makaka, half brother of King Williams II who ruled from 1882 when the latter was killed protecting Limbola against the Buea expansionists in a battle with the Bakwerians from Soppo.
1908: Victoria became home to its first Paramount Chief called King Johannes  Nambeke Manga Williams and his jurisdiction covered Bimbia along the fringes of the coast, West-ward towards the Mountain including federated villages of the Bakweris, Bambokos, Balongs.
Between 1908-1914: Chief Johannes  Nambeke Manga Williams signed many trade treaties with the Germans who installed many plantations and consequently warranted the region to regain its commercial hegemony once more.
1918-1928: Chief Manga Williams in addition to his numerous duties became the president of the court of Victoria after the First World War patronizing the native courts of the federated villages above mentioned.
 In 1928, King George the fifth of England granted him a certificate of recognition; Order of the British Empire (OBE)  for the valuable services rendered by him to his own country and the British Empire as having distinguished himself as President of the courts of Victoria.
In 1942, he became the representative of the whole trust territory of  the Cameroons which in those days included the Northern Cameroons in the Nigeria Legislative Council.
In 1946, he was appointed member of the Eastern House of Assembly
In 1954, when the Southern Cameroon House of Assembly was established, he was selected as  Native Administration member for Victoria Divisional Council.
In May 1951, he laid the foundation stone of the Cameroon Development Corporation during its creation and became the original member of the corporation.
In 1958, he was appointed by the British government to organize the celebration marking the 100 years anniversary of Victoria which were held for 7 days. It was during this occasion that the late Prime Minister of Nigeria, Sir Abubaka Tafaza Balewa laid the stone for the construction of the Victoria Centenary Stadium. Chief John Manga Williams poured the libation to the gods of Bimbia.
On the12th of December 1958 during this occasion, the unveiling of the Alfred Saker monument at the SDO’s office Victoria was done. Those who assisted Chief Johannes  Nambeke Manga Williams to unveil the monuments were Sir James Robertson and Sir Abubaka Tafawa Balewa’. The procurement of the Alfred Saker monument proper which now rests beside the SDO’s office was tasked to and conveyed from his son; Prince Jesco Manga Williams whilst  he had taken abode in England.
When King Johannes  Nambeke Manga Williams died in 1959, Prince Jesco waived his right and proposed his junior brother, Fergusson Manga Williams who became Chief of Victoria.
Amongst the achievements of King Fergusson B. Manga Williams include the popularization of the spirit of minority and integration, advocacy for the preservation and protection of the indigenous lands especially those which were conceded by lease to the Germans and later inherited by the CDC.
During the privatization process of CDC, Chief Ferguson of Victoria and Chief Endeley of Buea fought hard to retain the provisions under which native lands were conceded to the Germans. Consequent to this and in fulfilling the legacy of a Paramount chief of the villages which the Manga Williams forebears presided, are the benefits natives have presently in the acquisition of native lands which CDC releases back to these erstwhile federated villages.
King Fergusson Manga Williams passed unto to Glory in 2005 and amongst the many persons who were calling on the Manga Williams descendants for  the succession to be immediate and forthwith were the Chiefs of the federated villages of Victoria such as the Isubus, the Bambokos, and the Bakweri in channels such as correspondences, newspapers and radio to name a few.
The Manga Williams amid subsequent niches internally and externally have finally overhauled the details and should be respected to the letter to acquit themselves quietly of an enstoolment.
If the above posits of genealogy wouldn’t snow ball memories, the following prĂ©cis should for it goes without saying:
3.  ESTOPPEL
That the law governing Chieftaincy in Cameroon is absolute and the articles prescribed therein conforms with the methodology which the Colonial and National Govern0ments of Cameroon utilized in conferring the power of traditional rulership upon the Manga Williams in Limbe since 1908 in the absence of opposition to its incumbency and where pockets of distractions existed were settled absolutely to warrant the insurance that the law is not retrospective and does not backtrack statutes to determine present nominations and if such may be sought judicially, there exist statutes of limitations and probable cause. In the case of Limbe, no one should contemplate eligibility against the royal Manga Williams family of Limbe for the above clinical reasons.

Done at Limbe the 20th day of April 2014


PRINCE JERRY NAMBEKE MANGA WILLIAMS
FOR THE MANGA WILLIAMS/NAMBEKE FAMILY

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