29, June 2020
Yaounde to boost local production to deal with COVID-19 economic impact 0
Cameroon will boost production of locally made goods as part of new measures to handle the economic hardships resulting from the COVID-19 outbreak, the country’s Minister of Trade, Luc Magloire Mbarga Atangana said on Friday.
He said the Made in Cameroon initiative holds the key to the successful economic growth and recovery in the country, which is hit by the pandemic.
“We need to consume what we produce and produce what we consume,” Atangana told reporters in the capital Yaounde a day after the country’s Cabinet Meeting recommended the promotion of local production.
Cameroon needs more investments in food and local manufacturing sectors in a bid to promote domestic production and stimulate local consumption habits, he said.
Government intends to support local companies, accelerate the supply of large irrigated areas, supply improved seeds to smallholder farmers and subsidize fertilizer, Atangana said.
Containment measures against COVID-19 pandemic in Cameroon have seen the overall volume of trade in the first half of 2020 dropped by 16 percent, according to the country’s trade ministry.
Source: Xinhuanet



















29, June 2020
VOA Correspondent, several Southern Cameroonians arrested and ordered to speak French 0
A Cameroonian journalist who freelances for the Voice of America says he was harassed by police who seized his equipment Saturday in Yaoundé, the capital. Moki Edwin Kindzeka said he was also ordered to speak only in French.
In a social media post, Kindzeka said, “These guys should not molest people just because they speak the English language.”
The Cameroon Association of English-Speaking Journalists on Twitter condemned “this act in the strongest terms.” The group demanded an apology.
Kindzeka is also a journalist with the state broadcaster CRTV.
Timescape Magazine reports that the attack on Kindzeka came during military raids Saturday on Anglophone Cameroonians in the capital, many of whom were arrested and ordered to speak French.
Cameroon has had an ongoing separatist conflict that the U.N. says has cost more than 3,200 lives and displaced more than half-a-million people.
The conflict started in 2016 when protests by English-speaking teachers and lawyers against the dominance of French-speaking Cameroonians led some to take up arms.
Cameroon’s military declared war on the rebels, who have been fighting since 2017 to create an independent, English-speaking state.
Source: VOA