A Cameroonian US-based musician, Libianca, has postponed her North American music tour owing to death threats she has received from people sympathetic to the Ambazonian cause of independence in Cameroon.
She took to Instagram on Friday, saying she was moving the event ahead as a necessary precaution to remain safe.
“Hi guys, I will be postponing my tour due to the death threats I have been receiving. I refuse to cancel. I just need time to take the necessary precautions,” she said.
In a two-page letter addressed to the Cameroon government and the Separatist Movement, the talented singer penned down the genesis of the crisis that pushed her to reschedule her tour.
According to her, during her last tour in Australia, she started receiving death threats from a Cameroonian separatist group, “The Amba Boys,” because she and her team held a Cameroonian flag on the stage.
Separatists, she claimed, have interpreted her holding the flag as her position on the ongoing crisis that has gripped English Cameroon since 2016. In 2017, what started as a sit-in strike by teachers and lawyers of Anglophone extraction degenerated into an armed conflict, with separatists fighting to create a breakaway nation called Ambazonia.
Why should a war that is a product of the socio-political situation in the country be transformed into a musical stage?
Libianca has stated that she will not succumb to intimidation into supporting any cause.
“I have dedicated myself to showcasing the beauty of Cameroon and the talent of its people, and I will not allow anyone to take that away from me,” she said.
She stressed that her holding of the flag was a symbol of faith that someday “we, the people, will reunite and lead with love because we are better together when we help each other instead of hating each other.” To her, her holding of the flag was not in any way stating which side she belonged to.
However, the flag, she said, “is not Paul Biya”, President of Cameroon. “It is us, the United Republic of Cameroon, our vibrance, and our culture together,” she said, adding, “I am not a politician. I am a citizen who longs for peace and reconciliation.”
Born to parents from the Cameroon Northwest Region, Libianca grew up and schooled in Bamenda before returning to the USA.
Last year, she rose to fame after releasing her single “People.” The song became a hit internationally, and little-known 23-year-old Libianca Kenzonkinboum Fonji became a household name.
With her newfound fame, the artist from Minnesota in the USA has not been able to come home and celebrate these achievements with his Cameroonian family.
“This moment has been overshadowed by the relentless pressure to take sides in a conflict I hate,” she said.
In the face of this dilemma, she has chosen to remain silent because the side she has taken is that of unity for his people.
After announcing the postponement of the show, her fans have encouraged her to be strong.
Anglophones Cameroonians abroad who are spreading separatist propaganda have been noted to always attack popular people from the Northwest and Southwest who are not apologists for Ambazonia.