Cameroon

Cameroonian Woman Publishes Emotional Open Letter to Wife of Minister Atanga Nji Amid National Outcry

A powerful open letter written by a “Concerned Cameroonian Woman” and addressed to the wife of Cameroon’s Minister of Territorial Administration, Paul Atanga Nji, has ignited widespread public attention. The letter expresses profound grief and alarm over the circumstances surrounding the death of Georges Anicet Ekane, whose case has stirred controversy and intensified discussions on human rights, governance, and accountability in Cameroon.

The letter, circulated widely among civil society groups and on social platforms, appeals directly to the minister’s wife to confront what the author describes as a national moral crisis.

A Nation “Shaken by Accusations”

In the letter, the author writes with striking emotion about the shock many Cameroonians feel regarding allegations leveled against Minister Atanga Nji following Ekane’s death.

She states that the minister “stands at the center of serious public accusations that have shaken our nation,” highlighting claims made by prominent women leaders concerning his handling of Ekane’s deteriorating health.

Citing testimony from political figure Kah Walla and lawyer Dorcas Nkongme, the letter recalls that these women “went to your husband to express concern about Anicet Ekane’s deteriorating health,” only for him to allegedly dismiss their concerns “with laughter, as though the suffering of a fellow Cameroonian were of no consequence.”

According to Nkongme’s account, the minister’s alleged response was chilling: Ekane should “die and leave Cameroon in peace,” and that he would even “purchase a coffin.”

A Moral Appeal Behind Closed Doors

Rather than directing political criticism at Mrs. Atanga Nji, the author acknowledges that the minister’s wife is not a public official. However, she emphasizes that private influence can be as powerful as public office.

She asks:

  • When you sit beside your husband at the dinner table, do you speak to him about these things?
  • When the two of you kneel together in prayer… do you pray for the same Cameroonians who come to his office begging for mercy?

The letter repeatedly invokes the couple’s faith, noting that they “built a church and handed it to the Catholic Church,” and questions how this act of devotion aligns with the accusations being raised.

“This is the contradiction the nation confronts,” the writer says — a couple publicly committed to faith but linked to “accusations of intimidation, mockery, and disregard for the lives of fellow citizens.”

Women of Cameroon “Are Not Silent”

Throughout the letter, the author positions herself among a growing chorus of Cameroonian women demanding accountability and compassion in governance.

She writes:

  • We, the women of Cameroon, are grieving. We are watching. We are not silent.
  • I am asking you… to see the pain that so many Cameroonians are carrying right now.

Her call to Mrs. Atanga Nji is not for a political statement, but for a moral intervention:

“Speak truth where it matters most — in the privacy of your home, where a word from you may reach the heart of the man no government official dares to correct.”

A National Moment of Reckoning

The letter emphasizes that Ekane’s death is not an isolated tragedy. The writer notes that Cameroon is “already wounded by the deaths of more than fifty citizens — four of them reportedly dying in detention,” pointing to a broader climate of fear and mistrust among the public. OPEN LETTER TO WIFE OF ATANGA N…

She challenges Mrs. Atanga Nji to confront these realities with urgency:

“Do you remind him that power is temporary, but accountability — both before the nation and before God — is eternal?”

The open letter, though addressed to one woman, echoes the frustration and sorrow of many Cameroonians grappling with questions of justice, political responsibility, and moral leadership. Its publication has intensified national discourse around human rights and the conduct of state officials.

Whether Mrs. Atanga Nji will respond remains unknown, but the message ends with a solemn plea:

“Listen — and perhaps speak — not as the wife of a minister, but as a woman who knows the sacred value of a human life.”

MMI News

Evelyn Ndi

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