Take Back Cameroon

Our Platform

At 92 years old, Paul Biya be should retire

No More Dictatorship

No more dictatorship in Cameroon—it’s time for freedom, democracy, justice, and leadership that truly represents the people’s voice.

  • REGISTER AND VOTE

    Support opposition candidates and demand transparency in election administration.

  • SPREAD THE WORD

    Use social media, podcasts, and grassroots networks.

  • STAY INFORMED

    Monitor ELECAM, security developments, and international reports on Cameroon.

Schedule Your Appointment Today

Become a member of Take Back Cameroon—join the movement for justice, democracy, and a brighter future for every citizen.

Main Office Cameroon

How we hope to take back Cameroon

1. Grassroots Mobilization

This involves engaging communities at the local level across Cameroon—urban, rural, and remote. It means educating citizens about the campaign’s goals, organizing town hall meetings, peaceful marches, and training local leaders or activists to spread the message. Grassroots power builds legitimacy and ensures people feel ownership of the movement.

The campaign must use consistent slogans, symbols, and goals (like "No More Dictatorship" or "Free and Fair Elections") across all platforms. The messaging should be emotionally resonant and easily understood by all age groups and languages in Cameroon. A clear message builds identity and keeps people focused.

Leverage radio, television, Facebook, WhatsApp, TikTok, and YouTube to amplify voices, educate citizens, expose injustices, and document protests or voter suppression. This creates national and international visibility and can pressure the government by increasing public awareness.

Reach out to international human rights organizations, African Union (AU), United Nations (UN), and foreign governments. Advocacy includes writing reports, inviting observers, organizing diaspora protests, and lobbying for sanctions or diplomatic pressure against oppressive actions.

The campaign needs a political wing or alliance with existing opposition parties and legal experts. It should push for electoral reforms, challenge illegal rulings in court, protect political prisoners, and ensure that candidates are not unlawfully disqualified (as in Maurice Kamto’s case).

Maintaining a nonviolent approach ensures moral legitimacy and reduces state propaganda against protesters. The campaign must train members in peaceful resistance, legal rights during arrest, emergency response, and digital security to protect themselves from surveillance and violence.