24, September 2019
Biya regime in final stages of its life 0
The consortium of CPDM crime syndicates headed by the 86 year old President Paul Biya is in the final stages of its life, and the youthful Beti Ewondo political and military leaders are expediting the regime’s demise through their policies against the people of Southern Cameroons.
The Biya administration is old, unbearable, intolerable, unacceptable and at best primitive and is definitely in the final stages of its life because of natural reasons like its cruel measures over the past 37 years, the systematic corruption in the regime, suppression of the Cameroonian people, and totalitarianism of its rules.
The performance of incumbent Beti Ewondo French Cameroun political elites such as Ferdinand Ngoh Ngoh and Joseph Beti Assomo – which is in sharp contradiction to that of their French Cameroun predecessors such as the late President Ahmadou Ahidjo – will expedite the collapse of the Biya Francophone Beti Ewondo regime.
Biya and French Cameroun’s war on Southern Cameroons, the crimes committed by the regime’s army soldiers and Biya’s polarization of every aspect of the Cameroonian society has seriously affected the future unity of the so-called one and indivisible state.
We are currently seeing for the first time French Cameroun taxation officers intimidating business owners and collecting money to pay the army and civil servants and we are also seeing major Cameroonian partners such as the USA and Germany withdrawing support they had provided the Cameroonian people for decades.
An ex-convict Paul Atanga Nji was appointed Minister of Territorial Administration while a mentally deranged person is deputy minister for justice. Deranged means insane!
Biya started his hostile policies toward Southern Cameroons after the declaration of independence by the Ambazonia leader, President Sisiku Ayuk Tabe and the establishment of the Federal Republic of Ambazonia.
Biya’s rare address to the nation recently in which he accepted for the first time that there was indeed a serious crisis in Southern Cameroons and the silence of CPDM hardliners over the issue showed the regime’s ultimate humiliation and indicates that pressure is mounting.
French business tycoon, Bollore and the Chinese are taking over whatever is left of Cameroon in exchange for the political support that Biya receives from Paris and Beijing. French and US lobby groups are forcing Biya to pay more for political service offered in the West.
United Nations diplomats including Secretary General Gutteres are happy to keep Biya and his ruling CPDM elites as close partners because of Yaoundé’s extravagant payments in gold constantly being made to them! To be more accurate, Biya and his CPDM regime have nothing but cash that they dish out to lobby groups in Paris, Washington, Geneva and New York.
By Soter Tarh Agbaw-Ebai





















24, September 2019
Thomas Cook collapse prompts biggest ‘peacetime repatriation’ 0
The collapse of the travel group Thomas Cook has triggered something akin to a political and economic crisis in Britain, with dramatic news of tens of thousands of holidaymakers stranded abroad.
In what has been described as the UK’s “biggest ever peacetime repatriation”, the British government is scrambling to rescue 150,000 stranded British holiday makers.
The government-led repatriation programme, named “Operation Matterhorn”, is expected to last two weeks.
According to multiple media reports, the government has chartered 45 jets to bring stranded customers home, with 64 flights scheduled for yesterday alone.
The tour operator’s collapse has put 22,000 jobs at risk worldwide, with 9,000 UK jobs directly affected.
Thomas Cook’s chief executive, Peter Fankhauser, expressed “profound regret” over the firm’s demise. Underscoring the gravity of the situation, Fankhauser was at pains to apologise to the company’s “millions of customers and thousands of employees”.
Beside its immediate economic and humanitarian impact, the collapse of the 178-year-old firm is widely viewed as a huge iconic loss.
Thomas Cook collapsed after company bosses failed to secure £200m in emergency funding from creditors and the government to keep it afloat.
Even before the firm’s official collapse, there were extreme and dramatic stories about stranded British tourists abroad.
The Guardian reported on September 22 that some Thomas Cook customers in Tunisia were being prevented from leaving their hotels.
According to the Guardian, British guests at the Les Orangers hotel in the coastal town of Hammamet had been “locked inside their resort” and effectively forced to pay a £1,680 fee, before they were allowed to leave.
Similarly, the tabloid newspaper, The Sun, quoted holiday makers in Tunisia claiming they were being held “hostage” by their hotel, before being allowed to leave once a large fee had been paid.
In view of the company’s nearly two centuries long heritage, and its popularity with millions of holidaying Britons, the demise of Thomas Cook is being widely seen as a massive blow to the UK travel industry.
Source: Presstv