To be stayed, Emmanuel Bityeki leads the reader of his novel in this famous political prison.
Tcholliré is first the name of a town in Cameroon. But in a historical perspective, it is a city that evokes dark memories of the history of Cameroon. Famous political prison in the 1970s, Tcholliré which means "hill of birds" is a symbol of the brutal dictatorship would have affected the Cameroon after independence.
stopped because of an alleged plot against the President of the Republic of El Mujahid, the narrator finds himself embedded into the mobile brigade and then to the Joint Prison Tcholliré. He suffered torture and humiliation of unspeakable barbarism. The author of the novel, Emmanuel Bityeki we walk together in the reality of dictatorial regimes that have characterized most of post-colonial African countries. A dictatorship is not necessarily the fact of Heads of State. And this is one of the real revelations of the book. Because Tcholliré Hill Bird is the first chronicle of a dictatorship fueled by elements of law enforcement whose extreme zeal, careerism and opportunism ungrateful scratch and brutally violate human dignity and basic freedoms of citizens. This is slander, false accusations, denunciations fantasy underlying the success of these police and military who only care about their professional advancement. As the commissioner admits Molla, one of the characters in the novel: "During my long career, I looted, murdered, burned villages to believe in my leaders that guerrillas had attacked it ... This dear friends who assured my ascent. "
Tcholliré, Hill also said the birds, a rare Indeed, the crimes and horrors of a bloody and repressive political system. "With son appropriate connection fitted with tweezers, they linked the private parts of your body to the dynamo. This generator was operated manually by a soldier using the crank. The intensity of the electric discharge was proportional to the speed of rotation of the crank and thus the heat of the soldier to the task, "says the narrator. Fit of madness, suicide, fatal diseases, summary executions are the daily lot of prisoners who are not even allowed to defend themselves.
Roman testimony? It is not far when you consider that the author has himself been a political prisoner in the Mobile Brigade and the Joint Prison Tcholliré. But also the elements of fiction punctuate the book, giving it a look of genuine work of fiction. This is where the famous coup that overthrew President Al Mujahid or blindness which the narrator is struck at the end of the book. All things that obviously deviate from the reality experienced by the author.
true testament history, the novel evokes a whole Emmanuel Bityeki part of the history of Cameroon little known by new generations of Cameroonians. An easy book to read that the reader will appreciate the wry humor with simplicity and style of the author. Released after 9 years in prison, the narrator does not relish his freedom. He discovers the death of his relatives. A tragic end to which the reader barely missed crushing a tear and concluded with a vibrant emotion, the painful memories carried by a Cameroonian who has suffered from its flesh, the dictatorship regime of El Mujahid, whose name is close to a certain ... Ahmadou Ahidjo !
Agence France Presse (AFP) recently reports of violent clashes between Gabon and several law enforcement agencies with the key number blessés.La because of the confrontation being demanded the resignation of Ali Bongo's government to be present in the Presidential election on equal terms with his political rivals who have all resigned. For observers and others curious about the politics of Gabon, there is no doubt that Gabon, a country in peace time, is fast sinking into a dangerously deep and lasting political crisis. One reason for this; the stubbornness almost granitic Ali Bongo to run for the highest office at all costs. Obstinacy has revealed several times since the death of late President Omar Bongo, last June 8 in Barcelona, Spain.