5, April 2017
Brusselsgate: Yaounde police audition FECAFOOT officials 0
After the Tuesday 04 April 2017 meeting that held in the premises of the Ministry of Sports and Physical Education, some of the coaches of the Indomitable Lions finished the evening at the Judicial Police in Yaoundé Where they were also auditioned on the scandal in Brussels.
The officials of the Cameroon Football Federation were questioned for several hours late yesterday Tuesday 04 April 2017 by senior police officers and of the gendarmerie. The Biya Francophone regime opened a criminal investigation without informing the Football Association.
“When the technical and administrative staff of the Lions left the Ministry of Sports, they went to the Pj where they were heard until late last night. People think we’re joking, but they’ll be surprised. The Head of State demanded that the guilty be punished severely,” says a source in the office of the Prime Minister and Head of Government. A senior government official contacted by Cameroon Concord News confirmed the interrogation at the judicial police and added that the purpose of the hearings is to find the cause of the Brussels scandal and to establish the responsibilities.
During a friendly encounter recently against Guinea Conakry in Belgium, the indomitable Lions were prevented from having lunch at the restaurant of their hotel on Tuesday 28 March by the staff for an unpaid invoice. It was a great humiliation that has considerably tarnished the image of Cameroon and a team that just won the Africa Cup of Nations.
By Eyong Johnson with files from Cameroun Info.Net



















6, April 2017
DR Congo: Head of State to name new prime minister 0
Democratic Republic of Congo’s President Joseph Kabila on Wednesday pledged to appoint a new prime minister in the next two days, in line with a stalled December peace deal struck with the opposition. “The prime minister will absolutely have to be named within 48 hours,” Kabila said in a much-awaited speech to MPs and senators on the state of a December 31 power-sharing agreement, yet to be implemented. The deal brokered by the influential Catholic Church aimed to avoid a full-blown crisis in the vast restive nation following Kabila’s failure to step down at the end of his second and final mandate mid-December. It enabled Kabila to remain in office pending elections in late 2017 in tandem with a transitional body and a new premier, to be chosen within opposition ranks.
But putting the deal in place hit a major hurdle in early February with the death of veteran opposition leader Etienne Tshisekedi, who had gathered together the opposition in a coalition. In his speech in the capital, Kinshasa, Kabila urged the opposition group “to overcome its internal squabbles” and to hand him a list of candidates for the post of prime minister. Kabila has run one of the world’s least developed countries since the 2001 assassination of his father Laurent. Violence has flared across the country of 71 million people in recent months however, amid fears of a continued delay in this year’s promised elections.
Presstv