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  • Yaoundé steps up blood donation drive amid severe shortage
  • World Cup: Mexico begins process of taking South African jobs
  • Exam leaks in CPDM Cameroon: A symptom of a deeper corruption crisis
  • Middle East conflict sends global growth to lowest rate since COVID-19
  • The Holy Father cast flowers in sea in tribute to drowned migrants

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Biya regime explores new avenues of cooperation with UAE investors

17, December 2022

Biya regime explores new avenues of cooperation with UAE investors 0

Investors from the United Arab Emirate and Cameroon gathered on Thursday in Dubai to explore ways of strengthening business relations, investment opportunities and discussing prospects on signing mutually-beneficial partnership agreements.

During the ‘Cameroon Investment Week’ Investment Forum, which took place at Jafza 1 Convention Center, Jebel Ali Free Zone, the two countries delve into viable business and investment opportunities.

To foster discussions, the event assembled major high-profile stakeholders including; Technical Advisor for Economic Affairs at the Presidency of the Republic of Cameroon:  Jean Claude AYEM MOGER;  Abdulla Al Saleh, Under Secretary of the Foreign Trade and Industry at the UAE Ministry of Economy; Iya Tidjan, Ambassador to the Cameroon Embassy in Kingdom of Saudi Arabia; and the General Manager of the Investment Promotion Agency Cameroon Mrs. Marthe Angéline MINJA.

The event was also be attended by several top CEOs, managers of local governmental and private economic entities as well as representatives of the Cameroonian business community.Abdulla Al Saleh said,” The volume of non-oil trade between the UAE and Cameroon reached $406 million in the first nine month of 2020 with a over 5 per cent increase compared to the same period of 2021.”

He added,” This forum is a perfect platform to explore the new avenues of cooperation between the two countries.”

The Investment Forum featured an interesting panel discussion about Cameroon’s Business environment and investment opportunities in strategic sectors like oil, port, aeronautics, electricity & decentralization.

During the event, institutions from the UAE and Cameroon signed a memorandum of understanding (MoU) to create an attractive environment for UAE companies willing to invest in Cameroon, encourage the exchange of trade missions, and facilitate information exchange between the parties. The Mou’s were signed between:

Investment Promotion Agency Cameroon & UAE International Investors Council,    Investment Promotion Agency Cameroon & UAE Trade Centre,    United Councils & Cities Cameroon & UAE Trade Centre, Miller & Associates and UAE Trade Center and Investment Promotion Agency Cameroon & XFusion.

Mrs.  Marthe Angeline MINJA, General Manager of Investment Promotion Agency Cameroon, on this occasion said: “Cameroon, Africa in miniature, is not coming empty-handed to this give-and-take forum. Indeed, it has abundant assets, hence its attractiveness”

Walid Hareb AlFalahi, CEO of Dubai Consultancy & UAE Trade Center, expressed: “Cameroon is an emerging and ambitious economy, and it is evident that there is considerable scope to extend bilateral trade between UAE and Cameroon which would enable investment flows into priority sectors such as renewable energy, technology and logistics. UTC has been playing a key role in driving investment into key sectors in Africa and we are looking forward to play a key role in driving investment into Cameroon and further strengthen the relationship between UAE and Cameroon.”

The focus of this gathering was Foreign Direct Investments (FDI) attraction which are generally characterized by huge investment projects, high rate of job creation, a significant contribution to infrastructural development and transfer of technology, as well as their support to adding value to local resources. Thus, this event became a platform to ensure the attraction of sustainable FDIs in a bid to fast-track the achievement of Cameroon’s development goals.

In its 2022 investment report, the United Nations Conference on Trade and Development (UNCTAD) ranked the UAE as 17th country globally and first Arab country in the world in terms of FDI outflows that totaled $22.5 billion USD in 2021, reflecting a 19% growth compared to their 2020 records which clearly underlines the growing interest among UAE entities in investing in foreign markets and the positive effects that these entities experience from outward FDI.  According to a 2021 report and survey commissioned by the Dubai Chamber of Commerce, sectors including fintech, agriculture, health tech and e-commerce display great potential in African markets, provided companies can access the necessary investments to address challenges such as weak digital infrastructure, limited public amenities and unfamiliar regulations. The same survey from Dubai Chamber found that among business leaders in Africa, fintech is expected to see the most growth in 2022 — of up to 89 per cent, followed by agriculture and food processing, by 89 and 87 per cent, respectively. These figures indicate Africa’s position as an attractive investment destination with the potential to generate higher returns on investment in the long term.

The Investment Forum therefore form a part of undertakings to ensure continuity of the UAE-Cameroon business relationship.

Source: Gulf Today

BEAC puts into circulation new range of banknotes in Central Africa

17, December 2022

BEAC puts into circulation new range of banknotes in Central Africa 0

In the six countries of the Economic Community of Central Africa (Cameroon, Congo, Gabon, Chad, CAR and Equatorial Guinea), the BEAC (Bank of Central African States) has put into circulation new banknotes from December 15.

On posters and banners announcing these new banknotes, the BEAC emphasizes that these are “more compact, more modern and better secured” banknotes that it has put into circulation.

“For the production of these bills, BEAC has used technology that puts it one step ahead of counterfeiters. These bills have modern security features that are difficult to forge,” Emmanuel Asafor Sho, BEAC’s deputy national director for Cameroon, told the agency on Thursday.

“It is a technology that has significantly improved the quality of cash circulation by gradually replacing the bills of the 2002 range, most often worn, by new bills of the 2020 range,” he added stressing that “to ensure the authenticity of a bill, it is sufficient to apply the method “TRI”, a simple, fast and effective method that combines three gestures: Touch, Look, Tilt.

This new range comes after the 2002 range, 20 years later. According to the Bank of Central African States, these new bills were put into circulation on December 15 in accordance with the decision taken on November 7 in Douala by the Ministerial Committee of the Central African Monetary Union (UMAC).

The BEAC had stressed in a press release last November that despite the introduction of new banknotes of the 2020 range, the 2002 range of banknotes continues to be in force in the Economic Community of Central Africa (Cemac).

Source: Africa News

Biden jokes about plans to visit Africa, telling Biya and Co. he could eat their food

17, December 2022

Biden jokes about plans to visit Africa, telling Biya and Co. he could eat their food 0

U.S. President Joe Biden joked during a meeting with African leaders, saying he plans to visit their continent but may greedily eat their food, NYP reported.

The 80-year-old president said he is a poor relation who abuses his hospitality, but elicited heavy sighs from those in attendance over food insecurity in Africa.

“I’m grateful that all of you have made the journey to Washington for this summit, and I’m eager to visit your continent,” Biden told the representatives of 50 African nations at DC’s convention center after hosting them for a White House dinner Wednesday night.

“As I told some of you — you invited me to your countries. I said, ‘Be careful what you wish for because I may show up.’ The poor relatives always show up. The wealthy ones never show up. The poor come and they eat your food and stay longer than they should.”

Biden added, “Well, I’m looking forward to seeing many of you in your home countries.”

The president, who used to call himself middle-class Joe, often jokes about being a poor relation, despite the fact that he and First Lady Jill Biden earned a surprise $15.6 million in income in 2017 and 2018 after he left the vice presidency.

Biden previously had much more modest net worth, though members of his family earned huge salaries because of their association with him, including his son Hunter, who earned up to $1 million a year serving on the board of directors of the Ukrainian gas company Burisma, while his father headed the Obama administration’s policy on Ukraine.

Hours after his humorous remark, Biden addressed the summit again, this time detailing U.S. efforts to help poor countries in Africa with rising food prices.

“We’re facing a global food crisis, and nowhere is it felt more keenly than on the African continent. Last year, nearly 120 million people in Africa faced acute food insecurity and only halfway through 2022 as drought struck and the food costs soared… the number increased to 140 million people,” Biden said.

Biden added that Africa has “enormous potential” to use its “significant unused arable land” to feed its people and also help feed the world. He said the U.S. Department of Agriculture would assist in this effort.

The U.S. president has summoned African leaders, many of whom are fabulously wealthy thanks to stealing from their own people, as the U.S. government seeks to counter Chinese influence in the region.

Mini-corteges escorted by police cars with flashing sirens escorted African leaders to and from their luxury hotels near the White House this week, causing a traffic jam in D.C.

Only Eritrea and the leaders of the four countries ousted by the African Union for recent coups — Burkina Faso, Guinea, Mali and Sudan — were not represented.

Equatorial Guinea’s President Teodoro Obiang Nguema, who has held office for 43 years, was present even as U.S. authorities work to confiscate $70 million in assets allegedly stolen by his son as two-thirds of his country’s citizens live in poverty.

President Paul Biya of Cameroon, who has been in power for 40 years, also attended the Washington summit, as did President Denis Sassou Nguesso of the Republic of Congo, who has been in power a total of 38 years, and President Ali Bongo Ondimba of Gabon, who is known to have bought a $129 million house in Paris in 2010, a year after he succeeded his father, who ruled for 42 years.

Source: News Armenia

Geneva: Biya’s security guards fined for manhandling Swiss journalist

17, December 2022

Geneva: Biya’s security guards fined for manhandling Swiss journalist 0

The Geneva Police Court on Friday found six members of Cameroonian President Paul Biya’s security service guilty of manhandling a Swiss journalist of public broadcaster RTS in June 2019.

Ruling on appeal, the police court gave them suspended fines, according to a report in Le Temps newspaper confirmed by the journalist’s lawyer. The Geneva Public Prosecutor’s Office had previously sentenced the bodyguards to suspended prison sentences.

The RTS journalist was covering a demonstration of opponents outside the Intercontinental Hotel, where head of state Biya was staying. He was slightly injured. The bodyguards also stripped him of his professional equipment and personal belongings.

The Cameroonian bodyguards argued that they had immunity and the case went all the way to the Federal Court, which ruled that the agents had not acted that day for the security of Biya.

Quoted by Le Temps, the Geneva public prosecutor Olivier Jornot said in court that a “strong signal is needed to remind those who hide behind a so-called diplomatic status they cannot act as they please”.

Source: Swissinfo

Another legendary Makossa singer Djene Djento dies suddenly of cardiac arrest

16, December 2022

Another legendary Makossa singer Djene Djento dies suddenly of cardiac arrest 0

Tributes have been pouring to Djene Djento who died suddenly of a suspected cardiac arrest in Dschang.

Djene Djento who rose to prominence in the early 80s with his popular song debroussailler travelled to the land of his ancestors on Wednesday, December 14, 2022.

Cameroon Concord News gathered that the legendary Makossa singer and composer was attending a function in Dschang when he suffered a heart attack.

Djene Djento had a brilliant music career alongside some heavyweights like Manulo and Salle John.

His passing comes to further sadden the world of Cameroonian showbiz, which has already been scalded by the disappearance earlier this week of Ekambi Brillant.

By Rita Akana

Six years into a crisis between Biya Francophone government and S. Cameroons, families bear the brunt

16, December 2022

Six years into a crisis between Biya Francophone government and S. Cameroons, families bear the brunt 0

Five-year-old Josephine first met her father Louis Ambe when the coffin bearing his lifeless body was being lowered into the ground between the graves of his parents at the family residence in Bafia-Muyuka in southwest Cameroon.

It was April 19, 2022.

When she was born in November 2017, Ambe was in the sixth month of detention in the capital Yaoundé, awaiting trial. He had been arrested along with 16 others in Bafia-Muyuka, ostensibly in connection with the armed conflict in North West and South West, the country’s two English-speaking regions.

He died in prison earlier this year.

Josephine and her seven-year-old brother will remain with Martha Ambe, Louis’s stepmother who raised him from when he was eight, and who’s taken care of his children since he was arrested.

“I had hoped to see Louis released one day and meet his children whom he had barely known,” she said. “Each time I think about his death, I imagine how to take care of the children he left behind.”

Death in custody

There have been reports of other inmates dying in custody, including detainee Thomas Nganyu Tangem who fell ill in custody and later died chained to his hospital bed in Yaoundé in August 2020. His death and images of him shackled to a hospital bed prompted widespread outrage.

Ambe, his lawyer Amungwa Tanyi Nico said, was one of a group of 17 cocoa farmers arrested over a price dispute as the conflict was picking up.

Seeking leverage to force the farmers to lower their prices, the village chiefs in Muyenge – Ambe’s village – branded them separatists, Nico said.

Their case at the Yaoundé Military Tribunal suffered “unjustified delays”, he told Al Jazeera, with Ambe’s case in particular adjourned more than 40 times until he fell ill and died in detention.

“He vomited almost 2 litres [of blood] and they rushed him to an inadequate facility at the Kondengui Central prison where they could not attend to him on time,” Nico said.

The news of his death left his family pained as they wonder how to raise his children with meagre earnings they had hoped Ambe’s return to farming would boost.

Conflict in North West and South West

In 2016, lawyers and teachers in the country’s two Anglophone regions organised peaceful protests complaining of political and economic marginalisation by the central government, which like the eight other regions of Cameroon, is Francophone.

The situation spiralled into violence after the government used force against the protesters, leading to unrest in North West and South West.

Five years on, the conflict between the Cameroonian military and separatist fighters seeking a breakaway state of Ambazonia for the two troubled regions is still on, despite a national dialogue convened by President Paul Biya in 2019.

The secessionist agitation has been bubbling underground since a 1961 plebiscite joined the Anglophone regions, then a British colony with the rest of Cameroon, a former French colony.

But a change of the country’s name from the United Republic of Cameroon to Cameroon in 1984 deepened dissent in the area and rebel movements crystallised after the 2016 protests.

Since then, there have been stories of displacement and tragedy across North West and South West.

Death and detention

According to a February 2022 report by the International Crisis Group, at least 6,000 people have died in the conflict while another 765,000 have been displaced, of whom more than 7,000 are refugees in neighbouring Nigeria.

Human rights groups say government troops have committed human rights violations, including burning homes and entire villages as well as torture, detention and killings. Armed separatists are also reported to have kidnapped hundreds of people, and tortured and killed civilians.

In February 2020, at least 20 civilians, including children, were gruesomely killed in Ngarbuh, a village in North West. Eight months later, six children between the ages of 12 and 14 were killed by gunmen in a school in Kumba, South West region with about a dozen injured.

Beyond financial needs, experts say there’s a lack of psychosocial support for those caught up in the conflict, especially children who lose their adult caregivers and find themselves having to live with relatives in sometimes unfamiliar locations.

“And the majority of these children are left unattended and they develop [behavioural] conduct issues,” said Ndongndeh Godlove, a theologian and clinical counsellor in Bamenda.

“Sometimes it helps to say farewell to your loved one…but when you know that s/he died in detention, with no opportunity to bid goodbye, it is psychologically tormenting,” he added. “It takes years, to say the least, to help this child.”

“DNA of the Biya regime”

Human rights activists say Ambe’s case is a mockery of Cameroon’s judiciary system and evidence of many being detained without a fair trial in the country’s prisons.

More than 240 detainees have been in prison since 2017, some of whom have never been brought to trial, Kah Walla, human rights activist and leader of the Cameroon People’s Party (CPP) told Al Jazeera.

During Biya’s presidency, a recurrent feature has been the random detention of dissidents and anyone critical of the government’s handling of the crisis or the president’s 40-year rule.

There are no signs of that ending soon. According to a January 2022 report by Amnesty International, more than 100 people from the Anglophone regions have been arrested, with some tried and sentenced under a 2014 anti-terror law.

“This is part of the DNA of the Biya’s regime,” Walla said. “We have the government of Cameroon, the guarantor of rule of law, being the person who is violating the law”.

In April 2016, she launched FridayInBlack, a weekly peaceful protest that sees members of the CPP and the civil society group Stand Up for Cameroon wear black every Friday and protest within the premises of the party headquarters and online.

Taking the protest online came about because of citizens’ need to “express themselves politically with regards to a particular cause of a particular situation without putting themselves in a confrontational situation with the government or the armed forces”, Wallah said.

The Ambe family insist their son was innocent and activists agree with them that his killers may never be held accountable.

“Until the court of competent jurisdiction finds you guilty, you are innocent [and] Ambe died as an innocent person,” Nkongho Agbor-Balla, founder of the Centre for Human Rights and Democracy in Africa told Al Jazeera.

“The family will feel extremely bad because their child was taken away from them more than four years ago, no trial took place and his lifeless body was brought to them.

“Justice delayed is justice denied.”

SOURCE: AL JAZEERA

Don’t turn Africa into China-US battleground, Beijing warns Washington

15, December 2022

Don’t turn Africa into China-US battleground, Beijing warns Washington 0

Beijing has voiced its opposition to turning Africa into a focus of the rivalry between China and the United States as dozens of African leaders converge in Washington for a summit aimed at rebooting US influence on the continent.

Ahead of Tuesday’s start of the three-day US-Africa Leaders Summit, Chinese Foreign Ministry spokesman Wang Wenbin said China would form partnerships with African countries on the basis of mutual respect, equal treatment and sincere cooperation.

“We are glad to see that all sides of the international community are paying more attention to Africa, but we firmly oppose using Africa as an arena for great power rivalry and using African strategy as a tool to limit and attack other countries’ cooperation with Africa.”

Heads of state from 49 African nations and the African Union have been invited to take part in the summit.

China is seen as the United States’ most significant economic and military adversary. It has offered assistance in African affairs without conditions. Sub-Saharan nations have also been major recipients of Chinese investment through the “belt and road initiative.”

With dozens of African leaders descending on Washington this week, the administration of President Joe Biden is offering a not-so-subtle pitch in its economic competition with China on Africa.

Deputy Commerce Secretary Don Graves has acknowledged the US has fallen behind as China has surged past American foreign direct investment in Africa. The continent, whose leaders often feel they have been given short shrift by leading economies, remains crucial to global powers because of its rapidly growing population, significant natural resources, and a sizable voting bloc in the United Nations.

But the US has accused China of creating “debt traps” by extending unsustainable loans to developing nations with the intent of capturing loan-supported projects when they cannot pay back the loans.

Africa remains of great strategic importance as the US recalibrates its foreign policy with a greater focus on China.

Source: Presstv

Makossa: Ekambi Brillant is no more as cancer cuts his life short

14, December 2022

Makossa: Ekambi Brillant is no more as cancer cuts his life short 0

The renowned Makossa legend passed away on Monday, December 12, 2022 at the Laquintinie Hospital in Douala, aged 74.

Ekambi Louis Brillant succumbed to cancer after his return from a medical evacuation in Europe, according to sources close to his family.

Born on 18 June 1948, in Dibombari, a village near Douala, the Cameroonian international super star spent much of his childhood with his maternal grandparents in Djébalè (a suburb of Douala); it was there that his passion for music was born, listening to the pirogues singing on their way back from the sea.

In 1962, he passed the entrance exam and was accepted at the Lycée Général-Leclerc in Yaoundé and under the guidance of Mr. Zane Daniel – a French music teacher he learned how to play the guitar.

 In 1971, at the age of 23, he abandoned his studies to join Les crack’s as a guitarist. They performed in the nightclub Le Domino. He then entered the music competition launched by the Office de Radiodiffusion Télévision Française (ORTF) whose jury was composed, among others, of Manu Dibango and Francis Bebey. He won the competition and subsequently released his first single entitled “Jonguèlè la Ndolo”, which recorded 20,000 sales.

When he arrived in France in 1972, he signed with label Phonogram and released his second 45 rpm record which was also a success with 25,000 sales. In 1975, he broke his contract with Phonogram and joined Slim Pezin with whom he released the album Africa Oumba and the track “Elongui” which was later covered by several other African and European artists. This album recorded a record of about 4 million sales. This was followed by collaborations with Slim Pezin as producer for the tracks “Soul Castel” and “Musunguédi”.

By Rita Akana with additional files from Wikipedia

Qatar 2022: France end Morocco’s dreams

14, December 2022

Qatar 2022: France end Morocco’s dreams 0

After a dazzling run of wins captivated the footballing world, Morocco crashed out in the semi-finals after France’s solid attacking display gave them a 2-0 win. Les Bleus will now take on Argentina in Sunday’s final, after the genius Lionel Messi powered them to a resounding win over Croatia.

This wasn’t the stylish, thrilling march to the final that saw France’s rivals Argentina vanquish Croatia 3-0 on Tuesday. But it was a clinical, decisive performance, with an early goal from Theo Hernandez and a late strike from Randal Kolo Muani giving them a solid 2-0 win.

Despite a recurrence of France’s occasional defence errors, Les Bleus gave Argentina a lot to worry about with that performance. Kylian Mbappé was dazzling as ever with his lacerating pace and cool ingenuity under pressure – especially when he kept the ball when surrounded by Morocco defenders to set Kolo Muani up with that second goal. But arguably the greatest performance tonight was from Antoine Griezmann, who not only linked midfield to attack with those lovely passes, but also tracked back to basically play in centre-half position when Morocco offensives rattled France in the second half.

There will be tears aplenty, though, for Morocco after that ended a remarkable series of victories which saw them become the first ever African team to reach the World Cup semi-finals.

Source: France 24

Southern Cameroons Crisis: Anti-Biya protest takes place in Washington DC

14, December 2022

Southern Cameroons Crisis: Anti-Biya protest takes place in Washington DC 0

Southern Cameroonians living in the United States have organized demonstrations in the American capital to draw the world’s attention to the carnage and destruction the Biya regime is wreaking on the civilian population in the country’s two English-speaking regions.

The demonstrations are being held on the sidelines of the US-African Leaders Summit convened by the Biden Administration, a summit being attended by Mr. Biya and his entourage who are the architects of the misery spreading in the two regions.

The Southern Cameroonians, who came from all the nooks and crannies of the United States, sang peacefully across the streets of Washington in the hope that they would draw attention to the crisis playing out in the two English-speaking regions of Cameroon.

Anti Biya US demo

For more than six years, Cameroon has been battling a deadly insurgency which has left more than ten thousand people dead, including some four thousand soldiers.

The government has refused to negotiate a peaceful resolution and calls by the International community for a genuine dialogue have fallen on deaf government ears.

The fighting in the country’s two English-speaking regions has brought untold hardship onto the civilian population as the economies of the two regions have collapsed and millions have been displaced due to the bloody fighting.

The displaced have either headed to neighboring Nigeria or to French-speaking Cameroon where they are living rough due to the lack of proper housing, water and sanitation.

By Chi Prudence Asong in Washington

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