Mozambaque
Mozambique and Rwanda are Commonwealth members with no previous constitutional ties with the British Empire or another Commonwealth member. Cameroon is also a member of the Commonwealth and most of Cameroon was a French Trust Territory. Upon gaining independence it united with the smaller British Trust Territory of Southern Cameroon and joined the Commonwealth. This it does have constitutional links to Britain, in part.
Mozambique There are three African members of the Commonwealth that were never under British rule: Mozambique, Namibia and Rwanda.
I think you are probably referring to Cameroon but I'm not sure
Cameroon. This is not correct. Part of Cameroon was under British rule between 1919 and 1960. British Cameroon was in tow parts: one part joined Nigeria, while the other part joined Cameroon on independence.
The government of Jamaica is a constitutional parliamentary democracy and part of the British Commonwealth realm.
The Bahamas were a British colony until 1973, and after independence, became part of the British Commonwealth. The Commonwealth is a grouping of nations who were former British colonies and agree to recognize the British monarch as their head of state. All Commonwealth members are democracies, with elected Parliaments, where the monarch has theoretically extensive powers, but is in practice, more of a figurehead.
Mozambique. Not only was never a part of the British Empire, but has no ties linking it to the British Empire.
The British legislature is Parliament. Great Britain is a constitutional monarchy.
The British Empire today, is now called the British commonwealth, or Commonwealth Realms or Commonwealth of Nations
Both Mozambique and Rwanda are African Members of the Commonwealth of Nations who were never part of the British Empire. Cameroon might also be in that category, but a small part of Cameroon, called South Cameroon, was once a UN Trust territory administered by the UK.
After the British Empire collapsed, many in the Empire kept loyal to the British Monarchy and wished to maintain close ties to Britain. These nations formed the "British Commonwealth" Nowadays, it has been renamed to "the Commonwealth", dropping the British connection, although Britain remains a memeber. The Head of the Commonwealth is the British Monarch, currently Queen Elizabeth II, whom reigns seperately and independantly in all 16 commonwealth nations. The Commonwealth is a forum for a number of non-governmental organisations collectively known as the "Commonwealth Family", which strengthens the shared culture of the commonwealth through sport (the commonwealth games), literature hertitage and legal practices...In theory the Commonwealth countries do not consider one another to be "foreign"
Yes Pakistan is a member of the British Commonwealth