14, July 2022
Southern Cameroons Crisis: Killing of Field Marshal will not bring security for Francophone troops 0
The Ambazonia Interim Government says the reported assassination of the great Southern Cameroons fighter and leader of the Red Dragons of Lebialem will not bring security for the occupying French Cameroun soldiers.
Addressing a Southern Cameroons war cabinet meeting on the situation in Lebialem County, Vice President Dabney Yerima said if the killing of the Ambazonian Field Marshal by the French Cameroun military is intended to reinforce the Francophone regime’s position and provide impetus for the continuation of the policy of assimilation and marginalization, the effort is bound to fail. Yerima observed that the Red Dragons will be installing a new leader soonest.
Cameroon government military through a coded statement announced that its troops deployed to Lebialem have killed the leader of the Red Dragons.
The Ambazonia Interim Government and their supporters have denounced the killing and promised retaliatory attacks in the near future.
Yerima also warned that the Interim Government is keeping a close watch on the developments in Lebialem..
“The recent move against Southern Cameroons Self Defense Forces in Lebialem will be met with Amba decisive reaction” Yerima asserted.
Vice President Dabney Yerima also addressed the issue of the continued detention of Southern Cameroonians including President Sisiku Ayuk Tabe and his top aides in French Cameroun jails and reiterated that the Federal Republic of Ambazonia would not row back from its rightful and resistance stance.
Yerima advised French Cameroun military leaders to pay attention to realities in Yaoundé particularly attempts at imposing President Biya’s eldest son as his successor instead of continuing the defeated Southern Cameroons war policy.
By Soter Tarh Agbaw-Ebai



















14, July 2022
War in Ukraine: Latest developments 0
Here are the latest developments in the war in Ukraine:
‘Greatest challenge’
As G20 ministers prepare to start talks in Indonesia, US Treasury Secretary Janet Yellen says Russia’s war in Ukraine poses the “greatest challenge” to the global economy.
Moscow’s invasion has sent inflation soaring, threatening widespread hunger and poverty.
“We are seeing negative spillover effects from that war in every corner of the world, particularly with respect to higher energy prices, and rising food insecurity,” she says.
High-stake grain talks eye deal
Russia and Ukraine make substantive progress in their first direct talks since March on a deal to relieve a global food crisis caused by blocked Black Sea grain exports.
The high-stakes meeting involving UN and Turkish officials in Istanbul last just over three hours and break off with an agreement to meet again in Turkey next week.
Strike kills at 12, Zelensky slams ‘act of terrorism’
Ukraine President Volodymyr Zelensky lashes out at Russia for carrying out missile strikes that kill at least 12 people, including a child, on Vinnytsia in the centre of the country.
“Every day, Russia kills civilians, kills Ukrainian children, carries out missile attack on civilian facilities where there is no military target. What is this if not an open act of terrorism?” he says.
The strike on the central Ukrainian town also sparks a large blaze being fought by dozens of rescue workers and emergency services say 90 personnel are on the scene.
Global outlook darkened’
Yellen’s comments ahead of the G20 meeting echoes earlier ones made by the head of the International Monetary Fund, who said the global economic outlook had “darkened significantly”.
This was due to Moscow’s invasion and comes just months after the IMF revised down its global growth forecast for 2022 and 2023.
The IMF is “projecting a further downgrade to global growth” in 2022 and 2023, the fund’s chief Kristalina Georgieva says in a blog post.
Nod to Ukraine on Bastille Day
The war in Ukraine makes its mark on Paris’s traditional Bastille Day military parade as France honours its eastern European NATO allies.
“The parade is marked by, and takes account of, the strategic context,” says an official in Macron’s office.
“The idea is to highlight the strategic solidarity with our allies.”
Source: AFP