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Gregoire Owona : ウィキペディア英語版
Grégoire Owona
Grégoire Owona (born 1950〔"Owona Grégoire", ''Cameroun: Les Hommes de Pouvoir'', number 7, (Africa Intelligence ), 17 September 2002 .〕) is a Cameroonian politician who has served in the government of Cameroon as Minister of Labor and Social Security since December 2011. He previously served as Minister-Delegate at the Presidency for Relations with the Assemblies from 1997 to 2011, and he has also been Deputy Secretary-General of the Central Committee of the Cameroon People's Democratic Movement (RDPC) since 1992.
==Political career==
Originally from Ngomezap in Centre Province,〔〔Kini Nsom, ("Biya Overhauls CPDM Machinery, Appoints New SG" ), ''The Post'' (Cameroon), 10 April 2007.〕 Owona was first elected as a municipal councillor in Douala in 1987.〔("Grégoire Owona : L'ambition technologique en mouvement" ), RDPC website .〕 He was subsequently elected to the National Assembly in the 1988 parliamentary election〔〔 as an RDPC candidate in Littoral Province,〔 and he served in the National Assembly from 1988 to 1992;〔〔 during that time, he was Rapporteur-General of the National Assembly's Finance Commission.〔
At the time of the March 1992 parliamentary election, Owona said that the RDPC's problem "lies in winning by too great a margin; we would be taken for cheats."〔(''West Africa'', volume 2,002 ) (1992), page 459.〕 He became Deputy Secretary-General of the RDPC Central Committee in July 1992.〔 Following the October 1992 presidential election, in which President Paul Biya was re-elected, Owona criticized what he saw as the excesses of the press: "The current trend in Cameroon is to resort to invective ... and all those who slander and denounce would like the public to see them as heroes, threatened and persecuted."〔Francis B. Nyamnjoh, ''Africa's Media: Democracy and the Politics of Belonging'' (2005), page 187.〕 Owona was part of the delegation sent to the January 1993 inauguration of United States President Bill Clinton.〔Gerald Ndikum, ("Gregoire Owona defends Biya’s White House visit, says it was in Cameroon’s best interests" ), ''The Herald'' (Cameroon), 29 March 2003.〕
As President of the Technical Committee charged with drafting a new constitution,〔(''Africa Research Bulletin'', Volume 30 ) (1993), page 11,034.〕 Owona was considered the architect of the draft.〔Nantang Jua, "Problematizing a Transition: The Power Elite, the State, and Transition Politics in Cameroon", in ''Political Liberalization and Democratization in Africa'' (2003), ed. Julius Omozuanvbo Ihonvbere and John Mukum Mbaku, page 98.〕 On 12 June 1993, he announced that the second draft had been completed.〔 He was also Vice-President of the National Committee of Human Rights and Freedoms during the 1990s.〔''Protectors or Pretenders?: Government Human Rights Commissions in Africa'' (2001), Human Rights Watch, page 120.〕
Owona was appointed as Minister-Delegate at the Presidency for Relations with the Assemblies〔〔("Gouvernement du 07/12/1997" ), Cameroon government website .〕 on 7 December 1997.〔 He remained on the National Committee of Human Rights and Freedoms after his appointment to the government, and some in the opposition pointed to that as evidence of the Committee's lack of impartiality.〔
Following Biya's appointment of the members of the National Elections Observatory (NEO) on 10 October 2001, Owona, speaking on behalf of the RDPC, praised Biya's choices as wise and called on the members of the NEO to justify the confidence that was placed in them.〔("Les membres de l'ONEL prêtent serment devant la cour suprême" ), Panapress, 26 October 2001 .〕
Owona denied claims that the Anglophone population was politically marginalized in a January 2003 CNN report, arguing that Anglophones had appropriate representation in the nation's political structures and observing that the Prime Minister was an Anglophone.〔(''Inside Africa'' ), CNN transcript, 4 January 2003.〕 In March 2003, after Biya visited the United States and met with its President, George W. Bush, at the time of that country's invasion of Iraq, Owona defended the visit, stressing that Biya was working to advance Cameroon's interests. He said that the visit should not be perceived as marking a weakening of Cameroon's relationship with France and that it did not indicate an endorsement of the invasion.〔
Owona and RDPC Secretary-General Joseph Charles Doumba had a poor relationship; by 2003 they had reportedly not been on speaking terms for years, and Biya was said to primarily work with Owona, while largely ignoring Doumba, who was in poor health.〔Asong Ndifor, ("CPDM in crisis: Has Charles Doumba resigned ?" ), ''The Herald'' (Cameroon), 25 May 2003.〕

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