By Njoh Linda
Cameroon’s opposition landscape witnessed fresh tremors on July 15, as members of the G27+, a faction of dismissed Social Democratic Front (SDF) heavyweights, formally declared allegiance to the National Union for Democracy and Progress (NUDP).
Among them, Hon. Yoyo Emmanuel, a former SDF parliamentarian and National Financial Secretary, was unveiled to the media by NUDP’s Secretary General, Dr. Pierre Flambeau Ngayap.
Explaining his move, Hon. Yoyo said: “I went to the NUDP because they have promised to go back to the federal system of government, the introduction of the post of the vice president, and that the presidency should be rotatory between francophones and Anglophones.”
The declaration raises critical questions: Is the NUDP genuinely positioning itself as the alternative voice of the Anglophone population, or is it capitalizing on disillusionment within the fractured SDF?
During the press conference, the NUDP outlined its road map for addressing national crises, pledging to organize an all-inclusive dialogue once in power.
“No subject will be taboo,” assured Dr. Ngayap when pressed on resolving the Anglophone conflict.
Yet skeptics wonder how feasible such a promise could be in Cameroon’s rigid political space.
On security, the NUDP lamented the limitations of ELECAM in guaranteeing safe polling in restive zones, instead urging communities to “secure their own votes.”
But does this not risk deepening mistrust in state institutions and placing ordinary citizens at the frontline of political violence?
The G27+ defectors insist their departure from the SDF is a matter of principle, accusing the party of straying from its original ideals and allegedly “siding with the ruling CPDM.”
However, their sudden embrace of the NUDP prompts another uncomfortable question: are these moves driven by ideology, survival, or mere political opportunity?
Meanwhile, the NUDP has announced that its presidential candidate, Bello Bouba Maigari, will visit Bamenda in the next two weeks a test of both his appeal in the conflict-torn region and the party’s capacity to harness the momentum of these defections.
As Cameroon inches toward the 2025 presidential election, the defections of the G27+ highlight not just the volatility of opposition politics but also the urgent need for voters to ask: which party truly represents change, and which is merely recycling old power struggles under new banners?

