11, March 2021
Ivory Coast politics: Newly appointed Interim Prime Minister in Abidjan hospital 0
Amadou Gon Coulibaly who was Ivory Coast’s prime minister and the governing party’s candidate for the October 2020 presidential election, died just days after returning from a two-month medical treatment in France.
Cameroon Intelligence Report understands the 61-year-old, who had heart surgery in 2012, became unwell during a weekly cabinet meeting and was taken to a hospital where he passed away.
Coulibaly’s death created a huge uncertainty over the election in Ivory Coast, the world’s top cocoa grower. Ouattara had designated Coulibaly as the RHDP candidate in March after announcing that he himself would not seek a third term.
Hamed Bakayoko, a close ally of Ouattara, was appointed as prime minister in July 2020 following the sudden death of his predecessor Amadou Gon Coulibaly, who had been handpicked by Ouattara to succeed him. He also held the defence ministry portfolio.
Prime Minister Bakayoko was flown to France on Feb. 18 for medical checks. The government said in a statement on Friday that Ouattara had met Bakayoko during a visit in France recently, and given the state of the prime minister’s health, it was recommended that he should stay longer in hospital.
Ivory Coast’s President Alassane Ouattara on Monday named his chief of staff Patrick Achi as interim prime minister in place of Hamed Bakayoko, who was absent due to health reasons.
Bakayoko died from covid at a hospital in Germany on Wednesday. The 56-year-old had seen his health deteriorate sharply in recent days.
He had terminal cancer and had been hospitalised at the American Hospital in Paris since the beginning of March and was transferred to a hospital in Freiburg, Germany on Saturday, to undergo an experimental treatment.
By some strange happenstance, interim Prime Minister Patrick Achi is also presently dying in a hospital in Abidjan. The close confidant of President Ouattara has not even received his first salary as Prime Minister.
CIR is keeping a watchful eye on the situation in the Ivory Coast and we will keep our readers posted as we get it!
By Soter Tarh Agbaw-Ebai



















11, March 2021
Ambazonian Communication minister urges US to prevent humanitarian catastrophe in Southern Cameroons 0
Southern Cameroons Secretary of State for Communications and Information Technology, Hon. Milton Taka has urged the President Biden administration to pressure the French government in Paris and the Biya French Cameroun regime in Yaoundé into stopping the killing of innocent Ambazonian citizens in Ground Zero.
Comrade Milton Taka is with Vice President Dabney Yerima in South Africa, SABC news network reported Wednesday.
The Secretary of State for Communications and Information Technology hoped that the current US administration would shoulder its responsibility as the leader of the free world and work to ensure that the two Cameroons can hold intensive and productive dialogue in order to avoid a humanitarian catastrophe in Southern Cameroons.
Hon. Milton Taka opined that the current killing spree situation in Southern Cameroons-Ambazonia had become dangerous and that US and European Union intervention has become an urgent necessity.
Milton Taka reportedly hinted Vice President Dabney Yerima that the Southern Cameroons Interim Government should liaise with the European Union and the Biden administration to find a mechanism to stop the genocide presently going on the rural areas in Southern Cameroons-Ambazonia.
The level of barbarism being perpetuated by the Francophone dominated military and Cameroon government militias as they pursue their genocidal war and scorch earth policy to completely annihilate the Southern Cameroons (Ambazonia) is alarming now in the rural areas and in the borders with Nigeria.
So far, as a result of the on-going genocide in the Southern Cameroons (Ambazonia), an estimated 20,000 people have been killed, over 500 towns and villages have been burnt down, over 120,000 people are seeking refuge in Nigeria and further afield, over 1million people are internally displaced or living in bushes and over 3,000 persons incarcerated in prisons and detention facilities in French Cameroun.
By Soter Tarh Agbaw-Ebai in Mulheim an der Ruhr with files