Dubai Telegraph - Artists try to make Cameroon sing a different tune

EUR -
AED 3.843685
AFN 75.872415
ALL 98.733778
AMD 412.734104
ANG 1.886869
AOA 958.556336
ARS 1106.915874
AUD 1.64667
AWG 1.883625
AZN 1.783134
BAM 1.955881
BBD 2.113888
BDT 127.205283
BGN 1.956857
BHD 0.394365
BIF 3100.613963
BMD 1.046458
BND 1.399451
BOB 7.2343
BRL 5.999246
BSD 1.046943
BTN 90.404323
BWP 14.411117
BYN 3.426326
BYR 20510.585864
BZD 2.103087
CAD 1.489791
CDF 3003.336166
CHF 0.939592
CLF 0.025708
CLP 986.5282
CNY 7.587913
CNH 7.589571
COP 4278.445424
CRC 528.819437
CUC 1.046458
CUP 27.731149
CVE 110.76804
CZK 25.074509
DJF 185.97701
DKK 7.460835
DOP 65.272889
DZD 141.136941
EGP 52.899373
ERN 15.696877
ETB 132.874105
FJD 2.4168
FKP 0.827646
GBP 0.828419
GEL 2.934124
GGP 0.827646
GHS 16.237918
GIP 0.827646
GMD 75.44817
GNF 9052.099628
GTQ 8.075002
GYD 218.595332
HKD 8.130815
HNL 26.80406
HRK 7.537226
HTG 137.076419
HUF 403.755919
IDR 17046.244119
ILS 3.737165
IMP 0.827646
INR 90.607676
IQD 1369.474303
IRR 44090.687551
ISK 145.846653
JEP 0.827646
JMD 165.08814
JOD 0.74198
JPY 156.223172
KES 135.51094
KGS 91.778879
KHR 4204.880762
KMF 492.452244
KPW 941.818353
KRW 1501.120782
KWD 0.322867
KYD 0.863109
KZT 525.911548
LAK 22705.121265
LBP 93840.306703
LKR 309.739999
LRD 208.387288
LSL 19.168984
LTL 3.08992
LVL 0.632993
LYD 5.117165
MAD 10.4233
MDL 19.517092
MGA 4939.23915
MKD 61.449612
MMK 2196.437436
MNT 3626.32255
MOP 8.374155
MRU 41.938418
MUR 48.449616
MVR 16.162263
MWK 1812.540847
MXN 21.369077
MYR 4.628442
MZN 66.852471
NAD 19.168984
NGN 1573.849328
NIO 38.489726
NOK 11.66931
NPR 145.040237
NZD 1.822638
OMR 0.402882
PAB 1.046458
PEN 3.851188
PGK 4.103245
PHP 60.570095
PKR 292.3778
PLN 4.163906
PYG 8264.439589
QAR 3.8095
RON 4.983004
RSD 117.305205
RUB 92.936676
RWF 1466.880207
SAR 3.924609
SBD 8.934569
SCR 15.212666
SDG 628.706938
SEK 11.139357
SGD 1.398712
SHP 0.831543
SLE 23.796854
SLL 21943.716629
SOS 597.023998
SRD 37.320292
STD 21659.577382
SVC 9.156898
SYP 13606.033167
SZL 19.168984
THB 35.114721
TJS 11.412041
TMT 3.671232
TND 3.313637
TOP 2.517342
TRY 38.155278
TTD 7.100474
TWD 34.303631
TZS 2710.710894
UAH 43.574396
UGX 3843.602773
USD 1.046458
UYU 45.141983
UZS 13542.420154
VES 66.062196
VND 26715.476924
VUV 129.071619
WST 2.940274
XAF 656.602993
XAG 0.032128
XAU 0.000356
XCD 2.833067
XDR 0.797327
XOF 656.602993
XPF 119.331742
YER 259.078874
ZAR 19.220967
ZMK 9419.385666
ZMW 29.479376
ZWL 336.959198
  • SCS

    -0.1200

    12.31

    -0.97%

  • NGG

    0.2100

    61.31

    +0.34%

  • BCE

    0.4000

    23.97

    +1.67%

  • RBGPF

    65.4200

    65.42

    +100%

  • CMSC

    -0.0300

    23.37

    -0.13%

  • JRI

    -0.0200

    12.8

    -0.16%

  • BCC

    -9.4800

    107

    -8.86%

  • RYCEF

    -0.1300

    7.7

    -1.69%

  • RIO

    -0.7600

    63.53

    -1.2%

  • CMSD

    -0.0500

    23.42

    -0.21%

  • RELX

    -1.1200

    49.29

    -2.27%

  • VOD

    0.1000

    8.36

    +1.2%

  • GSK

    0.0807

    36.64

    +0.22%

  • AZN

    0.7100

    74.22

    +0.96%

  • BP

    -0.2800

    33.89

    -0.83%

  • BTI

    -0.7000

    37.85

    -1.85%

Artists try to make Cameroon sing a different tune
Artists try to make Cameroon sing a different tune / Photo: - - AFP

Artists try to make Cameroon sing a different tune

In the hustle and bustle of Yaounde, Quartier Mozart is a unique artists' refuge, which its creator hopes will free Cameroonians from the "self-censorship" they say is fuelled by the political status quo.

Text size:

The lower level of the industrial-looking loft is sometimes a cinema or a concert hall. At other times it is a restaurant with bric-a-brac decoration.

Furniture is made from pallets and film posters cover the walls. A laundry basket acts as a lampshade and iron staircases cut through the soaring height of the ceiling.

One morning in December, Landry Mbassi, a well-known local art critic, plunged this corner of the centre in darkness for the day's film club.

The screening was intended to be intimate -- and for good reason.

The subject matter is "highly sensitive", he joked as he introduced the session to the dozen or so artists, performers and other regulars gathered in the gloom.

On the bill were two previously censored Cameroonian films: "Um Nyobe, Unite Nationale" ("Un Nyobe, National Unity") by Nabe Daone, the first episode of a documentary series about Ruben Um Nyobe, a key Cameroonian independence figure.

The second was "Le President" ("The President"), a 2013 fictional film by Quartier Mozart's owner Jean-Pierre Bekolo, whose strangely close-to-reality plot has created controversy.

It paints a picture of an African president who has clung to power for 42 years -- just like Cameroon's actual President Paul Biya.

- Self-censorship -

"Cinema allows you to go where it's impossible to go in reality," the director told the small admiring audience via a microphone.

The 58-year-old filmmaker is convinced that cinema must "allow things to change".

He named the space "Quartier Mozart" in reference to his first film, which the Harvard University archive that mounted a retrospective of his work called "a comedy with a burlesque and fickle accent" and "social satire".

Bekolo even went so far as to imagine his own local currency, the "Quartier Doll'Art", to be used "exclusively for art, culture and artists".

The smallest denomination would be a 10 million note to "give the impression to the person who holds it of being rich", he said with a smile.

"As I don't like Cameroon as it is... I created this space to have a Cameroon that I love and to attract people who are going to make me want to love this country," he added.

The authoritarian government of Biya is regularly accused of corruption, bad governance and silencing dissent.

"Self-censorship has taken over to the point where the system no longer has to exercise it," said Bekolo, who said he created the Quartier Mozart centre in 2019 as a "place of awakening and awareness".

- Choose to stay -

For artists, choosing to stay in the country can be interpreted as "a form of resistance", Bekolo argued.

The filmmaker, who said he "gained nothing from Cameroon", lived for many years overseas and said he came back to the country of his birth even if it meant "living less well or having fewer resources", so as not to be among those "who gave everything to the West".

His vision is shared by the art critic Mbassi, who sees in Quartier Mozart "a place where ideas converge, where it's possible to express a free, neutral and avant-garde voice".

Such a cultural initiative is "rare" in Yaounde, the political capital of the country where "artistic dynamics are slowing down", he added.

For Xzafrane, a rapper and Quartier Mozart regular, "it's up to art and culture to reconnect Cameroonians" to their "deep DNA".

Through his music, the artist calls on his compatriots, whose daily lives are undermined by poverty, unemployment and injustice, to "think collectively".

He directly calls out Biya in several songs, among them "Rentre a la maison president" ("Come Home President"), released in 2024 during the ailing head of state's long period of absence from the country.

Biya, who turned 92 on Thursday and is the world's oldest serving head of state, could yet run for an eighth term of office at upcoming elections in October, potentially extending his four-decade rule.

Another of Xzafrane's songs is simply titled "Degagez" ("Get Out").

The rapper admitted that he knows the risk of such bluntness but said he was "more afraid for the future of his country than for his own life".

H.Hajar--DT