7, November 2020
UNICEF alarmed by spike in school attacks in Southern Cameroons 0
There has been an alarming spike in attacks on schools and education centers in the North- and South-West of Cameroon, UNICEF said today.
Since the resumption of the school year less than a month ago, there have been multiple reports of kidnappings, harassment and killings affecting students and teachers.
At least 6 students and 11 teachers were kidnapped, school premises were set ablaze and an unknown number of students and education staff were humiliated and harassed in various schools in Kumbo (Bui division), Fundong (Boyo division) and Limbe (Fako division).
These latest reports follow news that in Kumba, in the southwestern region, 9 students were killed, some as young as 9 years, and several others were injured in an attack on a school on 24 October.
“These attacks are unacceptable,” said Marie-Pierre Poirier, UNICEF Regional Director for West and Central Africa. “Schools are places of learning where children should feel safe and protected. We call on all parties to protect all children, at school or in their communities and to uphold the principles of the Safe Schools Declaration, which calls for stopping attacks on schools, education facilities and personnel.”
There were 35 attacks on schools in the unstable regions of Cameroon in 2019, according to UNICEF-verified data. This compares to 17 attacks so far this year, a decrease that might be attributed to COVID-related school closures between March and June.
“More than 1.1 million children are out of school in Cameroon. This number is expected to rise as parents and communities fear sending their children to school lest they are attacked on their way to or while they are at school. The children of Cameroon deserve better. Every missed opportunity for learning today, will prevent children from realizing their full potential and to become active and productive citizens of the future,” Poirier said.



















7, November 2020
Southern Cameroons Christians protest abduction of Cardinal, traditional Ruler 0
The Roman Catholic Church in Kumbo says hundreds of supporters assembled at the cathedral Friday calling for the immediate release of Cardinal Christian Tumi and the chief of the Nso people, Sehm Mbinglo.
The church says the 90-year-old cardinal and the chief, known as the Fon, were abducted Thursday night with their delegation just south of the town.
“These are authorities that have been ordained by God and placed there to look over his people and so it is high time all the population, not only the Nso man but everybody should go out today and let the Fon and the Cardinal be released. This is something outrageous,” Genesis Lukong, the secretary general of the Catholic Men’s Association, told VOA via telephone from Kumbo, in Cameroon’s Northwest.
Administrative officials in Kumbo’s Bui administrative unit confirmed the attack and blamed anglophone rebels.
The cardinal was released Friday morning, but Mbinglo remains captive.
Sub-Chief of the Nso people Fidelis Chin says Mbinglo’s health has been waning and he needs regular medical care.
“Any struggle that touches the Fon of Nso, that touches our tradition, that touches religion, is against the Nso people,” Chin said. “I call on all Nso elite, wherever they are, to come out. Let’s tell these Amba boys that enough is enough.”
It’s not the first time that separatists have abducted Mbinglo.
Mbinglo fled the area three years ago after rebels abducted him three times and killed two of his sons. The rebels accused him of collaborating with the central government.
Tumi led talks with the rebels each time to secure the chief’s safe return.
Catholic Lawrence Nsahbinla was part of the negotiations.
“It is not normal to abduct a man of God at his age,” Nsahbinla said. “And then they abducted him with his royal highness the Fon of Nso who was coming back to be reinstated in his dynasty. Two important personalities for the Christians and for the Nso man. This is something that the Christians and the Nso man have to take seriously and put an end to all these devilish actions.”
Teachers abducted
The abduction of the chief and the cardinal is the second such incident in Kumbo this week.
On Tuesday, gunmen attacked a Presbyterian school and abducted 11 teachers.
The teachers were released Thursday unharmed.
The rebels have been fighting in western Cameroon since 2017 to carve out an English-speaking state from the majority French-speaking nation.
The United Nations says the ongoing violence has claimed more than 3,000 lives and displaced more than 530,000 people.
Source: VOA