The struggle for the independence of Ambazonia has been long and costly. For decades, the people have endured repression, displacement, and bloodshed. Yet, one of the most dangerous threats to Ambazonian sovereignty has not come from outside alone but from within — from propaganda and factional rivalry that confuse the people and weaken the movement.
The Parliament of the Republic of Ambazonia was created to end this destructive cycle. By law, the Ambazonian Parliament is the sole and exclusive legislative authority of the people. It is the only platform where all factions are represented, where grievances are debated, and where decisions carry legitimacy. In contrast, propaganda — videos, declarations, and unilateral statements made outside Parliament — serves only to divide the people and distract from the true goal: sovereignty.
The danger of propaganda
Propaganda has been one of the greatest obstacles to Ambazonia’s liberation. Leaders competing for recognition have issued unilateral bans, declared other groups irrelevant, or spread accusations without evidence. These tactics, while gaining short-term attention, have long-term costs.
- They fracture unity.
- They mislead citizens.
- They give external actors the impression of chaos instead of order.
The result is weakened credibility on the international stage and a prolonged struggle for independence.
Why Parliament is different
The Parliament of Ambazonia is not built on personalities or propaganda. It is built on law and representation. Each group — SCNC, AGov-C, APLM, SOCADEF, MORISC, and the Interim Government factions — has its seat and voice in the House. No faction may silence another, and no individual has the authority to delegitimize a recognized body.
Through Parliament, unity is not just preached — it is practiced. Through Parliament, legitimacy is not claimed — it is conferred. Through Parliament, Ambazonia speaks with one voice to the world.
The path to sovereignty
Sovereignty cannot be won through propaganda. It can only be achieved through lawful governance, unity, and credible representation. International partners — the United Nations, the African Union, and world governments — will not engage with factions speaking on their own. They will engage with a lawful institution that embodies the collective will of the people.
That institution is the Parliament of the Republic of Ambazonia.
Conclusion
Propaganda divides, but Parliament unites. Unilateral declarations weaken us, but lawful resolutions strengthen us. Ambazonia’s sovereignty will not come from the noise of competing factions but from the authority of one Parliament, representing one people.
Parliament, not propaganda, is the only path to Ambazonian sovereignty.