About

The Founder

Background

Public Service

The founder of Sako Leadership Archives has moved through multiple roles shaped by conviction, controversy, and responsibility—each leaving an imprint on how leadership, power, and record are understood.

His public journey began in civic and moral advocacy, where the discipline of persuasion, conscience, and community engagement first took form. Over time, this evolved into direct political involvement, including service within government as Assistant Secretary of Foreign Affairs, where institutional dynamics, diplomacy, and internal constraint became unavoidable realities.

Subsequent elevation to Acting President of the Federal Republic of Ambazonia, and later to President of the Government of Southern Cameroons in Exile, placed him at the center of contested authority, emerging institutions, and fragile political ecosystems.

These roles were marked not by linear progress, but by uncertainty, rivalry, internal negotiation, and the constant tension between ideals and execution.

Experience

At the Center of Power

Leadership within transitional and exile structures demanded adaptation rather than certainty. Decisions were made amid limited resources, competing loyalties, ideological fractures, and external pressure.

The experience revealed:

  • How movements struggle to become institutions
  • How internal politics can rival external opposition
  • How legitimacy is contested, constructed, and lost
  • How early “baby steps” often determine long-term outcomes
  • How personal resolve is tested by collective expectation

These realities are rarely captured in public statements or official histories.

Lessons

Perspective Gained

What emerged from this trajectory was not a polished narrative of success, but a deeper understanding of leadership as a discipline shaped by restraint, error, and consequence.

The lessons were cumulative:

  • That authority without structure is fragile
  • That unity is harder to maintain than opposition
  • That moral clarity does not eliminate political complexity
  • That history is often written without access to deliberation

These lessons inform both the tone and intent of this archive.

Stewardship

Custodian of the Archive

Sako Leadership Archives is not a platform for legacy-building or personal defense. It is maintained as a record.

The founder serves as custodian rather than protagonist, committed to preserving context, clarifying contested narratives, and documenting experiences that would otherwise be reduced to slogans or erased entirely.

The emphasis is not on vindication, but on accuracy.
Not on authority claimed, but on responsibility exercised.

Editorial Standards

How Content Is Curated

All materials in Sako Leadership Archives are selected and organized according to consistent editorial standards:

  • Original long-form writing and reflection
  • Clear separation between fact, interpretation, and inference
  • Chronological and thematic organization
  • Preference for primary sources and firsthand context
  • Editorial restraint and formal tone
Role Within the Library

Inside the Archive

The founder’s role is to:

What is offered here is not a final account, but an honest one.