CAMEROON · POWER PLAYERS
Key Facts
—Out of sight: Paul Biya, 93, has been in Geneva since early June, according to Jeune Afrique and regional media, with no public appearance at home since.
—The trigger: Jeune Afrique reported on June 17 that Biya was being treated at a private Geneva clinic after a health incident during National Day celebrations on May 20.
—The denial: Cameroon’s government called the report “malicious and unfounded,” saying the president is in Geneva but not hospitalised.
—The escalation: broadcaster Channel Africa reported on July 9 that family members and senior officials, including son Franck Biya, had been urgently called to Switzerland.
—The backdrop: Biya won a disputed eighth term in October 2025 with 53.66 percent; challenger Issa Tchiroma Bakary claimed victory, and at least four protesters were killed, per Al Jazeera.
—The rulebook: if the presidency falls vacant, the Senate president serves as interim head of state and an election must follow within 120 days.
—The stakes: Cameroon is the largest economy and banking market in the six-nation CEMAC bloc; a chaotic succession would ripple across Central Africa.
Paul Biya, Cameroon’s 93-year-old president and the world’s oldest head of state, has been in Geneva for more than a month, and reports that his family has been urgently summoned to Switzerland have put Central Africa’s anchor economy on succession watch.
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Paul Biya’s longest silence in a tense year
Biya left for Switzerland in early June, according to Cameroonian and pan-African media, and has not been seen at a public engagement at home since. Officially, nothing is wrong.
Rumour has filled the vacuum. In Yaoundé, the president’s health is a subject officials refuse to discuss, and one that Al Jazeera has described as effectively off-limits for local journalists.
It is not the first vanishing act. In October 2024, a weeks-long absence triggered rumours that Biya had died, and the government responded by declaring his health a matter of national security before he resurfaced.
A report, a denial and a summons
Jeune Afrique reported on June 17 that Biya was receiving care at a private Geneva clinic after a health incident during Cameroon’s National Day events on May 20. The government pushed back within a day.
Communication minister René Emmanuel Sadi called the allegations “malicious and unfounded.” The head of state, he said, is in Geneva but not staying in any medical facility.
The story moved again this week. Channel Africa, the international service of South Africa’s public broadcaster, reported on July 9 that relatives and senior state officials, among them Biya’s son Franck, had been urgently called to Switzerland.
None of this has been confirmed by Yaoundé. What is not in dispute is the president’s prolonged absence from the country he has ruled for more than four decades.
A disputed election, barely six months old
Biya won an eighth term in October 2025 with 53.66 percent of the vote, extending a rule that began in November 1982. His main challenger, former minister Issa Tchiroma Bakary, rejected the count and declared himself the winner.
Security forces killed at least four protesters in the crackdown that followed, according to Al Jazeera. Chatham House warned at the time that suppressing protest would not solve the country’s looming succession crisis.
The president then largely vanished from view again. He had already spent long stretches of the campaign season abroad, reappearing only for brief appearances before the vote, per regional reporting.
What the constitution says, and what analysts fear
On paper, the path is clear. If the presidency falls vacant, the president of the Senate takes over as interim head of state and organises an election within 120 days.
Practice may be messier. Geopolitical analyst Aaron Nga’mbi told Channel Africa that factions who benefit from Biya’s presidency have worked to keep him in office, and that his permanent absence would likely trigger infighting and fracture the ruling party.
Some of Biya’s fiercest rivals are former ministers who broke from his inner circle. Cameroon has changed president exactly once since independence in 1960, so a contested handover would unfold with no living playbook.
The ruling CPDM party has never named a successor, and Biya has never publicly groomed one. Analysts have long viewed that vacuum, rather than any single rival, as the country’s biggest risk.
Why investors and neighbours are watching
Cameroon is the biggest economy and banking market in the six-nation CEMAC currency zone. Its port of Douala handles trade for landlocked Chad and the Central African Republic, making the country the region’s commercial artery.
France, the former colonial power, the United States and China all court Yaoundé, and each would read a succession differently. Cameroon’s Gulf of Guinea coastline and borders with six states make it a security lynchpin.
The economy pumps oil, exports cocoa and timber and anchors a pipeline of regional projects. Every one of them now carries a single unpriceable risk: who rules next.
The uncertainty lands on a state already fighting an Anglophone separatist conflict in its west and Boko Haram in its far north. A drawn-out power vacuum would strain both fronts at once.
Neighbouring capitals also remember that Cameroon’s only transition, in 1982, was a peaceful handover from Ahmadou Ahidjo to his prime minister: Paul Biya himself. Two years later, rival camps fought a bloody coup attempt.
Frequently Asked Questions
Where is Paul Biya now?
He has been in Geneva since early June 2026, according to Jeune Afrique and regional media; Cameroon’s government says he is in the city but not hospitalised.
What did Cameroon’s government say about Biya’s health?
Communication minister René Emmanuel Sadi called the hospitalisation report “malicious and unfounded” and said the president does not require the level of medical care suggested.
Who takes over if Cameroon’s presidency becomes vacant?
Under the constitution, the president of the Senate serves as interim head of state and a presidential election must be organised within 120 days.
How long has Paul Biya been in power?
Since November 1982, more than 43 years, making him the world’s oldest sitting head of state at 93.
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