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Amba fighters warn things will get out of control in December

25, October 2023

Amba fighters warn things will get out of control in December 0

Southern Cameroons Self Defense Groups have once again warned the regime in Yaoundé and its great benefactor, President Biya of the inconceivable consequences of the continued military operations in Ground Zero.

In two separate audio messages aired by Amba commanders in both Manyu and Bui Divisions, the fighters were heard saying that the territory known as the Federal Republic of Ambazonia is now a powder keg and continued French Cameroun military activities will have consequences for Francophone army soldiers.

In a hasty move last week the European Union announced that it was currently discussing the terms and conditions of military support for the Cameroonian army. That aid should amount to around €10m the EU hinted.

The EU gesture has been described by the Ambazonia Interim Government (IG) as unwise. Vice President Dabney Yerima has been quoted as saying that the EU is now   defending a regime that is killing civilians and burning hospitals and villages.

Yerima said French Cameroonians will be the ones to suffer if things spiral out of control in Southern Cameroons.

Seven years into a deadly separatist conflict in Cameroon’s English-speaking regions, hopes of finding a negotiated settlement seem more distant than ever as both the government and secessionist rebels dig in, according to civil society activists.

It’s a conflict marked by spikes of extreme violence that invariably target civilians. The latest high-profile incident was last month, when government soldiers killed nine people in Missong village, in the anglophone Northwest region.

Rights groups accuse both the security forces and secessionist fighters of serious abuses that include extrajudicial killings, rape, kidnapping, and torture.

The root of the conflict is the central government’s historical marginalisation of the two English-speaking regions, the Northwest and Southwest, home to about 20 percent of the population.

But the dynamics of the violence have changed with the growth of a lucrative “war economy”, typically involving kidnapping and the broader extortion of the civilian population. The political and economic spoils of the war have reduced the incentive to find a negotiated settlement.

By Toto Roland Motuba

US Politics: Republicans select fourth House speaker nominee in two weeks

25, October 2023

US Politics: Republicans select fourth House speaker nominee in two weeks 0

Republicans on Tuesday made their fourth pick in just two weeks to replace the ousted speaker of the US House of Representatives, underlining the chaos engulfing the fragmented party after three previous nominees failed to win the gavel.

Louisiana’s Mike Johnson won an internal party vote just hours after previous nominee, Majority Whip Tom Emmer, buckled under a backlash led by former president Donald Trump and announced his withdrawal.

Congress has been at a standstill and unable to address multiple global crises, as well as the fast-approaching threat of a government shutdown, since McCarthy’s historic dismissal in a far-right rebellion on October 3.

“The dysfunction in the Republican Party right now seems to be saying we want to lose,” exasperated Kentucky Republican Andy Barr told CNN.

“That is crazy to me. We were elected as a majority to govern, and we are not doing that right now.”

Johnson — the vice chairman of the conference but a relative novice in politics — lost out to Emmer earlier in the day but quickly threw his hat back in the ring after his leadership colleague bowed out.

But all the indications are that Johnson will likely fall foul of the same internal divisions that have left the party incapable of uniting around any leader.

Tuesday’s disarray marked two weeks since the party’s first nominee to replace McCarthy, House Majority Leader Steve Scalise, withdrew as it became clear he was nowhere near the 217 votes needed to be elected.

Hard-line Trump ally Jim Jordan, the next nominee, flopped three times on the House floor as successively larger tallies of Republican opponents joined the Democrats to reject him.   

Growing desperation

Adding to the sense of growing desperation in Republican ranks, McCarthy was pitching what looked like a far-fetched plan ahead of the latest contest that would see him reinstalled as speaker with Jordan as his assistant.

If Johnson were to succeed where his colleagues have failed, he would be the least experienced speaker in more than a century, having never chaired a committee or held a top leadership role.

And he could find himself presiding over a government shutdown in three weeks unless he can cut a 2024 budget deal with much more seasoned negotiators in the White House that is acceptable to his party.

He would also be expected to lead the deeply fractured conference through upcoming fights over funding for Ukraine and Israel in their conflicts with Russia and Hamas.

Johnson moved up to the House from state-level politics in 2017.

He is best known as a driving force among more than 100 Republicans who signed on to a legal brief supporting a lawsuit seeking to overturn the 2020 election results in four swing states won by Biden.

He can afford to lose just four Republicans and still claim the speakership if every Democrat votes against him, although the House adjourned until Wednesday with no election scheduled.

Only 128 of Johnson’s colleagues voted for him in the final round of balloting, according to US media — with 29 preferring his rival, Florida lawmaker Byron Donalds, and another 44 casting their votes for someone else entirely.

Like Johnson, Emmer had baselessly sown doubt over the validity of Biden’s 2020 election win over Trump, but supporters of the former president were angered by the majority whip voting to certify the result.

The writing was on the wall when Trump took to his Truth social website to brand Emmer a “globalist RINO” — short for “Republican in name only.”

Trump took credit for Emmer’s downfall as he spoke to reporters at his New York civil fraud trial.

“I assume it had a big impact,” he said of his statement.

Source: AFP

CPDM Crime Syndicate: Camwater signs school-to-employment deal with NHPSD

24, October 2023

CPDM Crime Syndicate: Camwater signs school-to-employment deal with NHPSD 0

Cameroon’s water utility, Camwater, entered into a partnership agreement on October 19th with the National Higher Polytechnic School of Douala (NHPSD) to facilitate the professional integration of graduates.

Under the agreement, NHPSD will provide its most qualified engineers to support the state-owned company. According to Camwater, NHPSD graduates will participate in specific projects conducted within the company, and Camwater will offer its support, to the best of its abilities and whenever feasible, for the training and organization of scientific and technological events at the University of Douala.

The state-owned company has additionally pledged to welcome interns from Polytech Douala and has been granted the privilege of retraining its staff at this vocational training school as part of their continuous professional development.

Source: Business in Cameroon

Kontry Sunday in Southern Cameroons: : booze, schmooze and lose

24, October 2023

Kontry Sunday in Southern Cameroons: : booze, schmooze and lose 0

It’s 10 am on a Monday in the Mile 2 Nkwen locality of Bamenda, a city in northeastern Cameroon. The streets are empty.

Mondays are “ghost town” days in the English-speaking regions of Cameroon that became engulfed in a separatist crisis some seven years ago.

In many communities, everyone is expected to stay home. Markets are closed, offices locked, and the streets deserted.

The separatists who took up arms against the government in Yaoundé enforce the Monday lockdowns. Residents risk being attacked, kidnapped or shot if they disobey.

The separatists hope to mount pressure on the central government to make concessions for the Anglophone community in the country, by stopping all economic activity once a week.

Cameroon has been plagued by fighting since English-speaking separatists launched a rebellion against the government in 2017. The dissidents say they want the region to secede from the area dominated by the French-speaking majority, and aim to create an independent, English-speaking state.

As a way out of the isolation and boredom of “ghost towns,” residents are finding new ways to network and support each other.

There are social and sports clubs, credit and thrift schemes, choirs or salons to stay active.

Economic social network gatherings

In Bamenda, one economic network benefits all members: financial contributions  are saved, pooled and payed out on a rotational basis to individual members.

The “Prosperous Neighbors” social network president, Ambechi Louis, says that despite the difficult security situation, members are finding ways to remain hopeful.

“We use Mondays for our meeting days because we used to hold them on Sundays and people often had other commitments. Since Mondays are a free day in the region, more people can participate,” Louis told DW.

Carine belongs to a social network group for women only; Mondays are her chance to get to know her neighbors better since everyone is busy throughout the rest of the week, she says.

“We are into neighbor solidarity and many others like veteran sporting clubs. Monday is a day to be home, so we want to use that to exercise, participate in online groups, wash clothes, meet friends and socialize,” Carine told DW.

Thriving drinking spots

Pubs in several communities are cashing in in on the ‘ghost town’ days. On Mondays, some pubs even apply a members-only policy and decline to serve drinks to anyone outside of their communities.

One pub owner, known as “Spice Boy,” says strangers aren’t allowed entry for security reasons. Any resident of the community will, however, be served.

“The days that the sales are [good] are Mondays,” he told DW. “The reason is simple: We have meetings that have all been moved from Sundays to Monday and after these meetings, [people] come to drink and socialize.”

“Spice Boy” says a normal day can bring in about €50-70 ($53-73) but a “ghost town” day can net double.

“Mondays can be very boring and to end the boredom people come to drink,” he said.

A local economy ‘on its knees’

But some analysts are worried about the prevailing situation of the ghost towns and the implications for the economic activities in the region.

“You see, ghost towns are very bad to the economy. Bamenda for example has lost its place as the fastest growing city in the sub-region,” Stephen Nsum, an economist and a Bamenda-based university lecturer, told DW.

He believes that if the phenomenon isn’t eliminated. it could plunge more people into poverty.

“Thousands have been laid off from their jobs because salaries can’t be paid. Investors have pulled out of the two Anglophone regions and even the biggest state employer after the public service is on its knees,” Nsum said.

“If ghost towns are ended there is hope the region shall gradually return to its part to economic recovery,” he added.

The English-speaking regions of Cameroon remain conflict zones with lives lost, properties destroyed, and the humanitarian crisis worsening.

Culled from DW

French Cameroun: At least 50 people are kidnapped over two days by unknown gunmen

24, October 2023

French Cameroun: At least 50 people are kidnapped over two days by unknown gunmen 0

At least 50 people were kidnapped in two separate incidents over two days in northern Cameroon, local authorities said Tuesday.

The kidnappings occurred Sunday and Monday afternoons by an unknown armed group near the border with Chad, the mayor of Touboro town, Celestin Yandal, told The Associated Press.

Seven people have been released so far. Abductions in this area happen often, but locals say the scale of these attacks is rare.

The first kidnapping took place between Touboro and Koutere towns, where mostly Chadians were taken as well as some people from Cameroon including students and shopkeepers, the mayor said.

The second abduction occurred while people were traveling on a bus from Ngaoundere city to Touboro, he said.

Cameroon has been plagued by fighting since English-speaking separatists launched a rebellion in the Central African nation in 2017 with the stated goal of breaking away from the area dominated by the French-speaking majority and setting up an independent, English-speaking state.

The government has accused the separatists of committing atrocities against civilians. The conflict has killed more than 3,300 people and displaced more than 750,000 others, according to the United Nations.

The country also faces a threat from Islamic extremists in the region.

Source: AP

At Celtic Manor in New Port: SOBA UK vow to reconcile, fulfilling St Joseph’s wish

23, October 2023

At Celtic Manor in New Port: SOBA UK vow to reconcile, fulfilling St Joseph’s wish 0

St. Joseph is the foster father of our Lord and Savior, Jesus Christ. He’s the patron saint of fathers and above all, he is the protector of the Church. Joseph is also the patron saint of laborers, because he was a working man, a carpenter. He’s the patron saint of families and, here’s a beautiful one, he’s the patron of the Sasse Old Boys Association all over the world.

St. Joseph represented peace and forgiveness but reconciliation was his trade mark.

At the Celtic Manor in the beautiful city of New Port in Wales, both President Obale Ebai and the much respected Gerald Nupa, echoed St Joseph’s sentiments during the SOBA UK Residential Annual Convention at the weekend.

The desire for reconciliation was visibly seen and spoken in all corners of the 5 Star International Golf resort and the general consensus was that unity is achievable.

The Sasse Old Boys were reminded that the prayer of His Lordship Bishop Bibi of the Buea diocese was that he wanted all Sobans in the UK to reconcile.

Outlining the vision of reconciliation that his predecessor Egbe Franklin had envisioned, SOBA UK president Obale Ebai observed that the era of negativity and unhealthy propaganda is over!

SOBA UK patron Dr Enow Humphrey who performed the installation ceremony ritual on the new executive told this reporter that “if we Sobans don’t reconcile, it’s like a powder keg that would torpedo all the achievements that have been made in SOBA UK.”

In his public statement during the barbecue, Valery Watat said that despite all the difficulties, Sasse Old Boys in the United Kingdom have to fulfill Bishop Bibi’s longstanding wish of having all Sobans bury the hatchet and to permanently reconciled and working together to build Sasse College.

“For this, we are today one SOBA UK” Valery Watat declared.

SOBA UK’s renowned master of ceremony Fritz Esambi also weighed in on reconciliation during the gala and vowed to continue working to rebuild and make SOBA an alumni force to be reckoned with in Cameroon and even beyond.

‘A good move’

Cameroon Concord News Group understands the blame game is now over as all Sobans in the UK are forging a good working relationship based on unity and integration.

In the words of Bertrand Abang, the 2023 SOBA UK Residential Convention at Celtic Manor was a kind of joint rally so that the working relationship matures organically among all Sasse Old Boys.

SOBA UK members have successfully discovered ways to overcome the obstacles that stand in their way.

By Soter Tarh Agbaw-Ebai in Celtic Manor

IG on Sisiku Ayuk Tabe: The greatest fear of any political prisoner is to be forgotten

23, October 2023

IG on Sisiku Ayuk Tabe: The greatest fear of any political prisoner is to be forgotten 0

The Southern Cameroons Interim Government has issued a statement detailing the current situation of the Ambazonia leader President Sisiku Ayuk Tabe and his top aides.

The statement decried La Republique du Cameroun’s crimes in Southern Cameroons and the holding of hundreds of Southern Cameroonians in French Cameroun jails.

The document made public by the office of the Vice President, Dabney Yerima observed that over the past 7 years, the French Cameroun regime has mastered the nasty game of arresting innocent Southern Cameroonians and Francophone army soldiers deployed to Southern Cameroons are now commercialising their freedom.

“The only message that Yaoundé is sending to the world by its continued incarcerating of the Ambazonia leader President Sisiku Ayuk Tabe and his top aides is that it revels in the endless depth of its gratuitous cruelty” the statement noted.

“President Sisiku Ayuk Tabe and his senior aides are detained for demanding the dignity and freedom that every human being is inherently entitled to; for representing the marginalized people of Southern Cameroons; for nothing. President Sisiku Ayuk Tabe and his jailed cabinet deserve their liberty” the statement furthered.

The Ambazonia Interim Government statement urged the international community to initiate a game-changing global endeavor aimed at stopping the war in Southern Cameroons and collectively impose draconian consequences on the 90-year-old Biya and his ruling French Cameroun political elites.

The IG press release reminded every Southern Cameroonian that the greatest fear of any political prisoner is to be forgotten.

By Soter Tarh Agbaw-Ebai

More than 1,400 African migrants reach Spain’s Canary Islands

23, October 2023

More than 1,400 African migrants reach Spain’s Canary Islands 0

More than 1,400 African migrants have reached Spain’s Canary Islands this weekend, with one vessel bringing a single-boat record of 321 people, authorities said Sunday.

A total of 1,457 migrants had reached the Spanish islands off the western African coast between Friday night and Sunday morning, the authorities said on X, formerly Twitter, adding to a recent spike in arrivals.

An emergency services spokesman said all of the arrivals hailed from sub-Saharan Africa.

Saturday saw 321 people reach the island of El Hierro aboard one vessel, a rescue services spokesperson told AFP, surpassing the previous record for a single boat of 280 on October 3.

Spanish broadcaster TVE showed images of a multicoloured vessel crammed with smiling and waving passengers reaching port.

Latest data from Spain’s interior ministry show 23,537 migrants reached the Canaries between January 1 and October 15.

The first fortnight of this month alone saw 8,561 arrivals — a record for a fortnight since a previous migration crisis in 2006.

Interior Minister Fernando Grande-Marlaska last week said on a visit to the archipelago the spike in numbers resulted from political “destabilisation in the Sahel”.

The Canaries route has been favoured in recent years with controls having been tightened in the Mediterranean.

However, many barely seaworthy vessels have not made it to shore as thousands of migrants risk their lives on the long and dangerous crossing from Morocco or Western Sahara — 100 kilometres (60 miles) away.

Others try even riskier routes from Mauritania, Senegal and even Gambia, around 1,000 kilometres away.

Source: AFP

First of 20 aid trucks enter besieged Gaza from Egypt

21, October 2023

First of 20 aid trucks enter besieged Gaza from Egypt 0

The first of 20 trucks carrying humanitarian aid entered the war-torn and besieged Gaza Strip on Saturday through the Rafah border crossing with Egypt, said AFP correspondents on both sides.

UN humanitarian chief Martin Griffiths said he was “confident that this delivery will be the start of a sustainable effort to provide essential supplies… to the people of Gaza” and warned that “this first convoy must not be the last”.

The border crossing was closed again after the passage of the trucks from the Egyptian Red Crescent which is responsible for delivering the aid, including food and medical supplies from various UN agencies.

Rafah is the only route into Gaza that is not controlled by Israel, which agreed to allow the aid in from Egypt following a request from its top ally the United States.

Israel has been bombing Gaza since Hamas’ bloody surprise attack of October 7 and has also declared a total siege, cutting off most water as well as food, electricity, fuel and other supplies.

Hamas militants stormed into Israel from Gaza and killed at least 1,400 people, mostly civilians who were shot, mutilated or burnt to death on the first day of the raid, according to Israeli officials.

Since then, more than 4,100 Palestinians, mainly civilians, have been killed in relentless Israeli bombardments, according to Gaza’s Hamas-run health ministry.

European Commission chief Ursula von der Leyen welcomed the aid passage as “an important first step that will alleviate the suffering of innocent people”.

Source: France 24

Every drop of Anglophone blood brings Biya’s family closer to destruction

21, October 2023

Every drop of Anglophone blood brings Biya’s family closer to destruction 0

The Vice President of the Ambazonia Interim Government has said that the man heading the criminal French Cameroun regime in Yaoundé is only accelerating the demise of his own family by killing innocent Southern Cameroons women and children.

In a press briefing late on Friday, Vice President Dabney Yerima stated that every drop of Anglophone blood brings Biya, his wife and children closer to destruction.

Dabney Yerima wondered aloud why French Cameroonians have continued to remain silent and accepting the heinous crimes in Southern Cameroons where soldiers loyal to the 90-year-old Francophone dictator are Killing women and children and destroying hospitals.

Vice President Dabney Yerima also pointed out that Yaoundé is now suffering the economic consequences of the war in Southern Cameroons at the hands of Southern Cameroons Restoration Forces’

Yerima also emphasized the rising resentment towards the ruling CPDM crime syndicate and its leader Paul Biya.

By Chi Prudence Asong

«< 214 215 216 217 218 >»

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