6, November 2023
Yaoundé: Biya marks 41 years in power 0
90-year-old Biya is marking today (Nov. 06) his 41 year-rule over the divided Cameroonian nation.
Last year, thousands gathered in Yaoundé, for the occasion but the president did not attend.
Paul Biya, a former Prime Minister, took the reins of Cameroon on November 6, 1982 following the resignation of the country’s first president Ahmadou Ahidjo.
Many voices within the ruling CPDM crime syndicate have already called for him to vie in the 2025 presidential election for an 8th, 7-year term.
Critics of his regime, however, wore black on Sunday. Some cited corruption, bad governance, and an ongoing succession battle.
Biya who celebrated his 90th anniversary last February is Africa’s second-longest serving leader.
Under him, Cameroon has faced challenges in recent years that range from a secessionist movement in the country’s English-speaking regions to the threat in the north posed by Islamic extremists aligned with the Nigeria-based Boko Haram group.
Paul Biya last won a presidential election in 2018.
Source: Africa News



















6, November 2023
Yaoundé: 77 private companies barred from public procurement 0
Seventy-seven private companies were denied government contracts last year, according to a document presented last October 27 by the National Anti-Corruption Commission (Conac).
The decision followed cases of irregularities identified in the execution of the contracts previously awarded to them. These include issues such as incomplete projects, abandoned construction sites, and financial shortcomings.
As per the Public Contracts Code, the ban on participating in public procurement cannot exceed two years. Further violations by the same companies might lead to permanent exclusion, under regulatory guidelines. Apart from these bans, Conac did not outline any additional sanctions imposed on the affected companies.
Individuals or companies facing these restrictions are not eligible for administrative purchase order procedures or public contracts. While the government sees this as an effective means to filter bidders, some industry players believe it’s not effective against providers who simply change their company names or managers and reapply. In 2020, the Ministry of Public Contracts published a list of 369 providers suspended from public procurement, particularly for abandoning construction sites.
Source: Business in Cameroon