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ABSTRACT
The disputes between Nigeria and Cameroon is recorded as one of the several existential boundary disputes in the international system. In fact, it is indeed a popular one owing to the gravity and oil resources which was termed to constitute the problematic between both states. The historical background roots rests on the formation of Imperialistic Europeans of the 19 th and 20 th centuries, especially, the theories of colonization of the Germans, French and the British. Anyu explicates that the Bakassi Peninsula conflict is one of the throwbacks of the continent of Africa to its colonial demarcation. Following its capture from Germany in 1916, the Cameroonian state was divided by Britain and France, and subsequently held as a mandate of the League of Nations. With the World War II, Cameroon became administered as Trust Territories of the United Nations (UN), with a resolve of a Trusteeship consensus settled in December 1946. Till 1970, the Northern and Southern regions of Cameroon were in realism administered as territorial aspects of Nigeria.