11, March 2021
Ambazonian Communication minister urges US to prevent humanitarian catastrophe in Southern Cameroons 0
Southern Cameroons Secretary of State for Communications and Information Technology, Hon. Milton Taka has urged the President Biden administration to pressure the French government in Paris and the Biya French Cameroun regime in Yaoundé into stopping the killing of innocent Ambazonian citizens in Ground Zero.
Comrade Milton Taka is with Vice President Dabney Yerima in South Africa, SABC news network reported Wednesday.
The Secretary of State for Communications and Information Technology hoped that the current US administration would shoulder its responsibility as the leader of the free world and work to ensure that the two Cameroons can hold intensive and productive dialogue in order to avoid a humanitarian catastrophe in Southern Cameroons.
Hon. Milton Taka opined that the current killing spree situation in Southern Cameroons-Ambazonia had become dangerous and that US and European Union intervention has become an urgent necessity.
Milton Taka reportedly hinted Vice President Dabney Yerima that the Southern Cameroons Interim Government should liaise with the European Union and the Biden administration to find a mechanism to stop the genocide presently going on the rural areas in Southern Cameroons-Ambazonia.
The level of barbarism being perpetuated by the Francophone dominated military and Cameroon government militias as they pursue their genocidal war and scorch earth policy to completely annihilate the Southern Cameroons (Ambazonia) is alarming now in the rural areas and in the borders with Nigeria.
So far, as a result of the on-going genocide in the Southern Cameroons (Ambazonia), an estimated 20,000 people have been killed, over 500 towns and villages have been burnt down, over 120,000 people are seeking refuge in Nigeria and further afield, over 1million people are internally displaced or living in bushes and over 3,000 persons incarcerated in prisons and detention facilities in French Cameroun.
By Soter Tarh Agbaw-Ebai in Mulheim an der Ruhr with files




























11, March 2021
Myanmar: Catholic nun begs police not to shoot protesters during unrest 0
A religious sister in northern Burma knelt before police on Monday, begging them not to use violent force against protestors.
In avideo, Sr. Ann Rose Nu Tawng, a member of the Sisters of St. Francis Xavier, can be seen speaking March 8 to two kneeling police officers in the city of Myitkyina, the capital of Burma’s northern Kachin State.
Speaking to Reuters, Tawng said: “I begged them not to hurt the protesters, but to treat them kindly, like family members.”
She said that senior officers had told her they were just clearing the street. In the video, the sister and one policeman can be seen touching their foreheads to the ground.
“I begged them not to shoot the children,” she said.
But soon after, “we heard loud gunshots and saw that a young kid’s head had exploded, and there was a river of blood on the street,” she recounted.
Tawng and other witnesses said that at least two protestors were killed and several injured in clashes with police.
The religious sister tried to bring some of the victims to a clinic she runs in the town but was blinded by tear gas.
“Our clinic floor became a sea of blood,” she said. “We need to value life. It made me feel so sad.”
Catholic nuns from a variety of communities in Burma have marched the streets, praying for the protestors and offering them food, according to UCA News. Amid protests in Myitkyina, the sisters hung signs saying “No to dictatorship” and “Listen to the voices of people” outside of their convent.
Burma, also known as Myanmar, is a country in Southeast Asia with a population of 54 million people. Both the democratically elected leader Aung San Suu Kyi and president Win Myint were detained by members of the military in the early hours of Feb. 1, after the military disputed the results of the 2020 election. The army general Min Aung Hlaing now leads the country.
According to an advocacy group, more than 60 people have died and over 1,800 have been detained as police crack down on protests against the Feb. 1 military coup.
Sr. Ann Rose Nu Tawng was also photographed kneeling before a line of advancing police officers late last month.
L’Osservatore Romanosaidthat the she ran out into the street on Feb. 28 as police fired tear gas at protesters.
“On her knees, she raised her hands to God and begged: ‘Don’t shoot, don’t kill innocents. If you want, hit me,’” the newspaper reported, adding that the police halted their advance.
Source: Catholic News Agency