Siddhesh Joshi (Editor)

Henri Hogbe Nlend

Updated on
Edit
Like
Comment
Share on FacebookTweet on TwitterShare on LinkedInShare on Reddit
Nationality
  
Cameroon

Fields
  
Mathematics

Name
  
Henri Nlend


Henri Hogbe Nlend wwwmathbuffaloedumadPIXhogbenlendhenrigif

Born
  
23 December 1939 (age 84) French Cameroons (
1939-12-23
)

Institutions
  
University of Yaounde University of Bordeaux

Doctoral students
  
Jean-Francois Colombeau Jean Esterle Jean-Pierre Ligaud Bernard Perrot

Institution
  
University of Yaounde, University of Bordeaux

Alma mater
  
University of Bordeaux

Doctoral advisor
  
Laurent Schwartz

Henri Hogbe Nlend (born 23 December 1939) is a Cameroonian mathematician, university professor, former government minister and presidential candidate.

Henri Hogbe Nlend Henri Hogbe Nlend HogbeH Twitter

Biography

Henri Hogbe Nlend was a Professor at the University of Yaoundé, and at the University of Bordeaux.

In 1976 at a meeting of the International Mathematical Union it was decided to form an African Mathematical Union. Hogbe Nlend was elected as its first president. A post he held until 1986. The AMU was partially funded from another body on Paris which was also chaired by Hogbe Nlend. It was said that he was good at raising funds and that meetings were held twice a year.

Hogbe Nlend was a candidate in the presidential election held on 12 October 1997, which was boycotted by the major opposition parties, and placed second, although he received only 2.9% of the vote. The winning candidate, incumbent President Paul Biya, appointed Nlend as Minister of Scientific and Technical Research after the election.

His textbook on the theory on duality topology-bornology and its use in functional analysis has been described as a classic.

Henri Hogbe Nlend is a member of the historical Cameroon party, the Union of the Peoples of Cameroon (Union des Populations du Cameroun) and leader of one faction of this party. Hogbe Nlend fell out with Augustin Frederic Kodock, the Secretary-General of another UPC faction, in 2002. At the time of the July 2007 parliamentary election, Charly Gabriel Mbock, member of Hogbe Nlend UPC faction and outgoing UPC parliamentary deputy, resigned from the UPC and joined a new party, National Movement Party, vowing to carry on the struggle for which UPC has stood for, but this was disbanded when differences were resolved a year later, in a reconciliation meeting with the Hogbe Nlend UPC faction. (Kodock claimed in a press conference that Mbock had insufficient support to move this new party forward as he lacked the 500 signatures required by law). In reality, the 1990 Law to constitute an entity for legalisation as a political party in Cameroon does not include this requirement.

References

Henri Hogbe Nlend Wikipedia