Charles Mambo and Issa Tchiroma Bakary
The strength of a politician does not lie in stubbornness but in the ability to adapt. Only tyrants cling rigidly to their old convictions while the world around them changes. True integrity requires humility to reconsider, courage to admit error, and wisdom to adjust when new facts appear. To change one’s views is not weakness—it is the very essence of honesty.
Cameroon now stands at a crossroads, yet too many of its leaders remain chained to the past. They mistake rigid inflexibility for strength and obstinacy for conviction. By contrast, true leadership recognises when the national mood has shifted, when justice demands correction, and when conscience compels renewal.
Issa Tchiroma has shown this quality. Unlike those who claim to be infallible, he has had the courage to admit when circumstances changed and when his own thinking needed to evolve. For this, some of his political opponents have ridiculed him, accusing him of opportunism. But what have they offered instead? Endless talk of principles that never adapt to reality—principles that harden into irrelevance while Biya and his ageing courtiers keep the nation paralysed.
Tchiroma, by contrast, has acted with integrity. He reached out to other opposition figures to form a coalition bloc in the coming presidential elections. He reconciled with his brother with whom he had different political beliefs. He has proposed federalism to decentralise power and grant greater autonomy to the regions. He has called for reforms in education, giving equal weight to technical and grammar schools. Most importantly, he has promised to release political prisoners, showing a willingness to heal and reconcile the nation–a move which promises to solve the Anglophone Crisis as well as the Boko Haram insurgency in the Far North.
The truth is simple: only tyrants refuse to change. Only those consumed by ego cling to error rather than admit they were wrong. History proves this. Mandela, Lincoln, Churchill—all grew in stature not by repeating themselves, but by revising their positions when truth demanded it. They understood that growth is itself a virtue.
Tchiroma belongs in this tradition. His readiness to adapt is not weakness; it is his greatest strength. It shows humility before truth, courage in the face of scorn, and loyalty to progress rather than pride. Those who mock him for changing views reveal not strength of principle but fear of growth.
Cameroon does not need leaders who worship their past words as sacred scripture. It needs a leader who recognises that truth is alive, that justice evolves, and that integrity means bowing to reason when reason shines brighter. That leader is Issa Tchiroma.
There is no shame in admitting that a once-cherished position was wrong. The most admired leaders in history became great precisely because they grew beyond their earlier selves. They did not confuse stubbornness with strength, nor consistency with truth.
Those who condemn change as betrayal misunderstand political morality. To deny the need for change is to elevate arrogance above truth, ego above justice, and pride above the common good. The true disgrace lies not in the politician who evolves, but in the critics who cling to stagnation.
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