21, July 2018
Southern Cameroons Crisis: GTTC Ndop ravaged by fire 0
Government Teachers Training College, GTTC Ndop has reportedly been burnt down by a group of unknown Southern Cameroons militants in the early hours of Saturday the 21st of July. The Francophone dominated police service revealed that locals sounded the fire alarm at 9 am.
A resident noted that the fire consumed the administrative department of the school including the principal’s office and the staff room. The French Cameroun administrators have blamed the incident on Ambazonian separatists operating in the area.
We understand the school premise has been used by the hierarchy of the ruling CPDM party for political meetings the most recent being that of Honorable Njinguh Musa, CPDM MP for Ngoketunjia North Constituency.
Source: Journal du Cameroun





















21, July 2018
Revealed: 34,000 Southern Cameroonian refugees in Cross River State 0
The Cross River State Emergency Management Agency (SEMA) on Friday said that over 34,000 Cameroonians, were currently taking refuge in six local government areas of the state.
Mr John Inaku, the Director General of SEMA in the state, disclosed this in an interview with the News Agency of Nigeria (NAN) in Calabar.
Inaku said that the inflow was as the result of the crisis in Cameroon over the demand for Ambazonia Republic by the Southern Cameroonians.
Inaku told NAN that the asylum seekers were currently taking refuge in Obudu, Boki, Ikom, Etung, Akamkpa and Obanliku Local Government Areas of the state.
“So far, we have 34,000 Cameroonian asylum seekers spread across six local government areas in Cross River.
“About 21,000 of them have been documented by the United Nations High Commission on Refugees and the National Commission for Refugees.
“As an agency, we go into the interior areas that have not been accessed by these organisations and holistically, we have 34,000 of them already on ground,’’ he said.
The director general told NAN that the state government was doing its best in providing succour to the refugees, adding that the increasing number was too heavy for the state government alone to handle.
He however, appealed to the National Emergency Management Agency (NEMA), corporate organisations and other humanitarian agencies to offer their support to the refugees.
Source: Daily Trust