28, July 2021
Cameroon civil war rages unabated 0
NEW research has revealed the devastating scale of destruction caused by the ongoing conflict in Cameroon’s English-speaking regions.
Fighting between various armed groups and the Cameroonian armed forces has continued unabated in the regions for the past three years.
Civilians have borne the brunt of unlawful killings, kidnappings, and widespread destruction of houses and villages.
Government intervention has been limited, and there has been near-complete silence from the international community, according to Amnesty International.
Violence between government forces and the Anglophone armed separatist groups-who are themselves divided-erupted in 2017, when protests against alleged discrimination and marginalisation were repressed by the authorities.
Based on eyewitness testimonies and analysis of satellite images, Amnesty International documented how dozens of civilians have been killed and multiple villages destroyed since 2019.
“All parties to the conflict in Cameroon’s Anglophone regions have committed human rights violations and abuses, and civilians are caught in the middle,” said Fabien Offner, Amnesty’s Central Africa Researcher.
Offner said in one case, armed separatists shot dead two elderly women with barrage rifles.
In another, Fulani vigilantes burned hundreds of houses and killed four people.
Amnesty has decried the difficulty of obtaining accurate information about the human rights crisis unfolding in affected regions, which are hard to reach by road and have poor telecommunications networks.
“But this is no excuse to look away – without strong action by the authorities and the international community, civilians will continue to bear the brunt of the crisis,” Offner said.
The Anglophone regions of Cameroon – the South-West and North-West – make up approximately 20 percent of the country’s population of 27 million.
Violence has recently intensified in parts of the North-West.
Source: CAJ News



















27, September 2021
Cameroon humanitarian crisis worsens 0
The dust has settled on the ethnic clashes that recently left at least 12 people dead in northern Cameroon but humanitarian needs are escalating.
Over a month after the land dispute featuring the Mouzgoum and Choa Arab communities in the Logone-Birni district in the Far North left another 100 people injured and an estimated 30 000 others displaced from their homes, the rainy season brings a peak in the rates of malaria and diarrheal diseases.
Recurrent floods increase the risk of cholera.
This after the looting and burning of villages led people to seek refuge in Kousseri while others acrossed the border to Chad.
Health workers have been mobilised in the central African region to respond to the consequences of the clash.
In collaboration with the Kousseri Health District, Doctors Without Borders/ Médecins Sans Frontières (MSF) intervened in the first days of the clashes.
This enabled the hospital in Kousseri to provide better care for the injured.
Ballé Diouf, head of MSF’s Kousseri emergency project, said the support MSF provided by referring injured patients with serious cases to the Chadian capital, N’djamena, relieved the patients, families and staff at the hospital.
“This has made it possible to save the lives of patients who would otherwise might not have received appropriate care in Kousseri,” he said.
When the fighting began, an MSF team comprising two doctors, two nurses, and a clinical psychologist along with a coordinating team cared for injured and displaced people in the villages of Missika, Madiak and the Logone Birni district.
Most of the people displaced were forced to leave their possessions behind when they fled their homes, walking several kilometres to reach safety.
Malaria, diarrhea and child malnutrition have been identified as the main health problems.
A total of 1 972 medical consultations were carried out in Oundouma and Gamakotoko.
Some 33 patients, including wounded people, pregnant women and severely malnourished children were assisted.
MSF has been present in Cameroon since 1984.
Source: CAJ News