19, October 2016
Cameroon: A journalist with the Investigation newspaper arrested in Yaounde 0
Nestor Nga Etoga, a journalist and editor of a weekly newspaper The Investigation, was arrested on Tuesday the 18th of October 2016 at about 10 am, at the Nlongkak Roundabout in Yaounde by plain cloth police officers and is now being held in a cell at the Centre Regional Delegation for National Security.
Cameroon Concord News gathered from local media sources that he had earlier been summoned by a state prosecutor, Georges Gérard Meka, of the Mfoundi High Court in Yaounde for blackmail-a complaint initiated by Fipcam, a logging company based in Mfou (25 km from Yaoundé).
The journalist had reported a story on the working conditions at the Cameroon Flooring Manufactures (Fipcam) where the workers of the said company complained about their wages, working conditions and lack of any form of social care for the last 13th months.
The company leaders are now using their connections in government to send the journalist to jail. Many Cameroonian journalists are subject to death threats, as part of their profession, in a country where press offenses are still not decriminalized.
By Fru James






















19, October 2016
70 Nobel Prize winners have thrown their support behind Hillary Clinton 0
A group of 70 Nobel Prize winners have thrown their support behind the US Democratic presidential nominee, endorsing Hillary Clinton for presidency in the run-up to the 2016 elections.
In an open letter on Tuesday, the world’s leading experts in science, medicine and economics “strongly and fully” backed the former secretary of state, arguing that her election is crucial for preserving freedom, safeguarding national security and protecting a constitutional government. “It is imperative that Hillary Clinton be elected as the next president of the United States,” they wrote.
“We need a president who will support and advance policies that will enable science and technology to flourish in our country and to provide the basis of important policy decisions,” the laureates added.
The letter made no mention of Clinton’s Republican rival, Donald Trump, but it suggested that policies that show a lack of appreciation for scientific knowledge could harm America’s national security.
The signatories of the letter, among whom were prominent names such as chemist Peter Agre, economist Robert J. Shiller and physicist Robert Woodrow Wilson, also pointed to global issues, including cancer, Alzheimer’s disease and climate change as problems that require innovation and investment.
Along with other GOPers, Trump believes that the climate change issue is just a “hoax.” According to The New York Times, “The fact that the Nobel laureates are backing Mrs. Clinton does not come as a big surprise, as academics overwhelmingly tend to lean Democratic.”
The race between Trump and Clinton represents a battle between two of the least liked major party candidates in US history. A Washington Post/ABC News poll released in August found Clinton and Trump were the most unpopular presidential candidates in decades.
Presstv