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US: Biden joins battle for Senate as top Trump ally finally accepts win

16, December 2020

US: Biden joins battle for Senate as top Trump ally finally accepts win 0

President-elect Joe Biden threw his weight into the Democratic battle for control of the US Senate on Tuesday, as his White House win was finally acknowledged by top Republicans and holdout foreign leaders.

Biden flew into Georgia — a southern state he won in an upset against President Donald Trump — to host a rally for two Democratic candidates in runoff races that will determine the Senate’s balance of power.

“Honk for your next United States senators Jon Ossoff and Rev. Raphael Warnock,” Biden told the crowd at the drive-in event in Atlanta — urging voters to turn out in force on January 5.

“Send me these two men, and we will control the Senate!”

Buttigieg named secretary of transport

One day after the Electoral College affirmed Biden’s victory, attention shifted to the looming Senate battle — and to the shape of the incoming administration, as Biden also announced he had nominated Pete Buttigieg, a former Indiana mayor and presidential rival, as secretary of transportation.

Buttigieg would be the first openly gay person confirmed by the Senate to a presidential cabinet post — in sync with Biden’s pledge to usher in the most diverse cabinet ever when he takes office on January 20.

And while Trump still refuses to concede — continuing to tweet baseless allegations of mass fraud that have been rejected in dozens of lawsuits — top Senate Republican Mitch McConnell finally broke his silence with a message to the president: it’s over.

“The Electoral College has spoken. So today I want to congratulate President-elect Joe Biden,” McConnell said on the Senate floor, adding that Americans can also “take pride” that they will have their first female vice president in Kamala Harris.

Biden told reporters before flying to Georgia that he had a “good” phone conversation with McConnell, a longtime Senate colleague.

“I told him that while we disagree on a lot of things, there are things we can work together on,” Biden said.

The Electoral College confirmation triggered an acknowledgement of Biden’s win from Russian President Vladimir Putin, who said he was “ready for collaboration” with the Democrat.

Brazilian President Jair Bolsonaro and Mexico’s Andres Manuel Lopez Obrador — who had both waited until now to recognize the president-elect — also sent their congratulations.

‘Turn the page’

Trump, in unprecedented fashion, has yet to acknowledge his defeat in the chaotic election that will see him exit the White House after a single four-year term.

But Biden urged the divided country to “turn the page” as he welcomed the Electoral College vote on Monday, saying US democracy proved “resilient” against Trump’s “abuse of power.”

He praised voters for casting ballots in record numbers despite fears of Covid-19 and “enormous political pressure, verbal abuse and even threats of physical violence.”

The White House transition is occurring with the coronavirus pandemic surging, pushing US Covid-19 deaths above 300,000.

While critical winter months lie ahead, a bright spot has emerged with health care workers receiving the first doses of the coronavirus vaccine distributed in the nation.

And with top infectious disease expert Anthony Fauci recommending Biden and Harris quickly take the vaccine, the president-elect said they would receive the shot in public view.

Minds on Georgia

Although the door has all but shut on his efforts to overturn the vote results, Trump has remained defiant, insisting in a series of tweets that he won a “landslide victory” and that there were still “tremendous problems” with the vote.

In a threatening move against Republican leaders in Georgia, where he has made baseless claims of massive voter fraud, he retweeted a pro-Trump lawyer who posted a picture of Georgia’s governor and secretary of state, saying “they will soon be going to jail.”

Democrats, who control the House of Representatives, need to flip both Georgia Senate seats in order to seize control of the upper chamber, while Republicans must hold just one to maintain their majority.

Republicans have framed Georgia as must-win races, with the state forming the last line of defense against what they describe as radical “socialism.”

If Republicans do, McConnell remains majority leader, and his relationship with Biden will quickly become the most closely watched in Washington.

The pair were known for striking deals during crunch periods when Biden was Barack Obama’s vice president.

But McConnell gave Obama no quarter, repeatedly stymying him on judicial nominations and forcing the president to curtail his legislative agenda.

Source: AFP

Southern Cameroons Crisis: Yaounde says forces dismantle explosive devices in Manyu

16, December 2020

Southern Cameroons Crisis: Yaounde says forces dismantle explosive devices in Manyu 0

Cameroon army said Monday it has dismantled six improvised explosive devices planted along a major road in the English-speaking region of Southwest where armed separatists are known to be actively operating.

The explosive teams dismantled the devices early Monday in Kembong locality of the region which has been grounds for fierce battles between government forces and armed separatists.

Officials said the explosive devices were planted by separatists targeting security forces who usually use the road.

Armed separatists have been clashing with government forces since 2017 in a bid to create an independent nation in Cameroon’s two English-speaking regions of Northwest and Southwest.

Source: Xinhuanet

Central African Republic: Campaigning begins in tense vote

15, December 2020

Central African Republic: Campaigning begins in tense vote 0

Campaigning has started in the Central African Republic’s tense presidential vote on December 27.

Although it has been quiet in the capital Bangui, it is a different story in the provinces.

On Sunday, some candidates braved the threats in the central city of Bria, which is marred by armed violence.

Africanews witnessed the scenes of cheers and dancing as a large crowd made up of several hundred fighters and internally displaced people showed their support for two young candidates.

“Everything is happening amicably, in peace and in social cohesion. People came from PK3 from Bornou and from Bogolo and from the center they are united for the campaign,” said Wilfred.

Armed groups still control much of the landlocked country despite a peace agreement signed almost two years ago and one in four people are either internally displaced or living as refugees in neighbouring countries.

The presidential and legislative election is already tense.

UN-sanctioned former leader François Bozizé is trying to run again. He was exiled for six years after he was ousted by rebels but returned in late 2019.

But supporters of the incumbent president, Faustin-Archange Touadéra, say he can’t run as he was not in the country for 12 months after he submitted his application, which is required by law.

Protests have already broken out over the situation.

The election will be the second since fighting broke out in 2013 following the coup when the mostly Muslim Séléka rebel alliance that overthrew Bozizé fought the mostly Christian and the anti-Balaka militia, which the ex-president is accused of creating.

Source: Africa News

Southern Cameroons Crisis: Two armed Atanga Nji Boys lynched in Bamenda

15, December 2020

Southern Cameroons Crisis: Two armed Atanga Nji Boys lynched in Bamenda 0

Two suspected armed robbers linked to the Atanga Nji Militia have been lynched in Ntamulung in Bamenda for allegedly robbing several elderly people including a retired Presbyterian Church pastor.

The two Atanga Nji Boys were among three people who attacked the Ntamulung neighborhood on Monday, December 14, 2020.

They were stoned to death by the mob before their bodies were set ablaze.

The robbers, who masqueraded as Ambazonia Restoration Forces were all chartered members of the Minister Paul Atanga Nji armed militia who no longer receive financial support from the regime in Yaoundé.

We gathered that the Atanga Nji Boys were three in number but one managed to escape.

By Fon Lawrence in Bamenda

US: Biden clinches Electoral College victory, Trump yet to concede defeat

15, December 2020

US: Biden clinches Electoral College victory, Trump yet to concede defeat 0

US President-elect Joe Biden has officially gained the Electoral College victory by hitting 270 votes.

Biden reached the crucial milestone after electors in the Blue state of California handed the former vice president 55 votes on Monday.

“We stand not for ourselves and not for our party but for the people of Georgia,” Stacey Abrams, a former Democratic gubernatorial candidate and one of her state’s 16 electors in Georgia said.

Barr resigns

Biden’s presidency was secured as Trump’s Attorney General Bill Barr resigns.

“Just had a very nice meeting with Attorney General Bill Barr at the White House,” outgoing President Donald Trump said on Twitter. “Our relationship has been a very good one, he has done an outstanding job!”

He added that, “Deputy Attorney General Jeff Rosen, an outstanding person, will become Acting Attorney General. Highly respected Richard Donoghue will be taking over the duties of Deputy Attorney General.”

Barr’s resignation was announced amid speculations that the US president was considering parading himself from myriad potential crimes, some currently under investigation.

Trump is yet to concede his defeat in the 2020 presidential election to the Democratic nominee.

Members of Congress are expected to certify the Electoral College vote on Jan. 6. Biden will be sworn in as the 46th president on Jan. 20.

Source: Presstv

Ivory Coast’s Ouattara sworn in for disputed third term

15, December 2020

Ivory Coast’s Ouattara sworn in for disputed third term 0

Ivorian President Alassane Ouattara was sworn in for a controversial third term on Monday, urging the opposition to help defuse tensions after election-related violence claimed 85 lives in the West African powerhouse.

The ceremony was attended by 13 African counterparts as well as French Foreign Minister Jean-Yves Le Drian and former French president Nicolas Sarkozy — but boycotted by the opposition, as was the October 31 election that returned Ouattara to power.

“I ask all political parties to seize this new opportunity… to defuse tensions through dialogue,” the 78-year-old president said, noting publicly for the first time that legislative elections will be held in the first quarter of 2021.

Ouattara promised the creation of a national reconciliation ministry in the next government, while stressing that “violence and intolerable acts… should not go unpunished”.

It was a tacit warning to several opposition leaders who were arrested in the wake of the election, with legal proceedings over “sedition” launched against them.

But leading opposition figure Henri Konan Bedie last week proposed a “national dialogue”.

He also announced the dissolution of a rival government, the “National Transition Council”, that the opposition set up after the election, a move that landed spokesnan Pascal Affi N’Guessan in jail.

Bedie, 86, a former president himself, stopped short of recognising Ouattara’s re-election with more than 94 percent of the vote.

Ouattara and his supporters had argued that a 2016 revision of the constitution reset his term counter to zero, allowing him to seek a third term.

Pre- and post-election violence has claimed at least 85 lives since August, with around 500 injured, according to an official toll.

– Memories of civil war –

For many Ivorians, the bloodletting revived painful memories of the aftermath of disputed elections in 2010.

A political standoff was followed by a brief civil war in which around 3,000 people died and an estimated 1.3 million people fled their homes.

Ouattara has asked his prime minister, Hamed Bakayoko, to resume discussions with the opposition on the composition of the Independent Electoral Commission (CEI).

The opposition is demanding a reform of the body, which it accuses of bias.

In his speech on Monday, Ouattara said he would devote his third term to education and the social safety net as well as reconciliation, vowing to lift three million people out of poverty.

While the country of 25 million has enjoyed strong economic growth and the completion of several infrastructure projects under Ouattara, critics say the poorest have been left behind.

Source: AFP

Southern Cameroons Crisis: Scheduled killings are underway

15, December 2020

Southern Cameroons Crisis: Scheduled killings are underway 0

The Southern Cameroonian law enforcement officers have begun enforcing the 2017 decree by the USA-based Interim Government which considers that any Southern Cameroonian who participates in any proscribed election in the newly minted country will face the death penalty.

The country’s law enforcement agents are busy at work, keeping an eye on all those who brazenly violated the law in a fake election organized by the crime syndicate that has ruled the country for 38 years.

A day after the fake elections organized by the corrupt Yaoundé government, a Widikum councilor was brought down for violating a law inspired by God.

Yesterday in Buea, three traditional rulers who thought they were above the law were taken into preventive custody where they were questioned about their devilish intentions to permanently keep Southern Cameroons in the exploitative grip of the CPDM crime syndicate.

Chief Ewule supported by his lawyer

The traditional rulers had not only violated the law by stepping out to vote, they had committed treasonable felony by voting for the crime syndicate that has exploited Southern Cameroons for decades.

One of the criminals did not survive the soft questioning by professional and seasoned Southern Cameroonian law enforcement agents.

Having been suffering from hypertension and a heart problem, the criminal, who has escaped Southern Cameroonian justice, gave up the ghost while in custody.

He will however be tried in absentia. In Southern Cameroons, the law is the law and anybody who contravenes the law must face its full wrath.

The two other criminals were released yesterday after posting bail. They will be visited from time to time by law enforcement agents to ensure they do not skip town.

Southern Cameroonian laws are working and anybody who thinks belonging to the crime syndicate is enough protection is just deceiving himself.

It must therefore be underscored that all the culprits and enablers of the corrupt Yaoundé government resident in Southern Cameroons will be rounded up and punished according to the 2017 decree issued by the USA-based Interim Government.

According to the fighters on the ground, more deaths have been scheduled and law enforcement agents are busy enforcing the law.

Southern Cameroonians had been duly warned and the law is no respecter of persons.

In a previous voice note sent to the Cameroon Concord News Group prior to the charade called elections by Southern Cameroonian fighters, the fighters had clearly made their intentions known.

As the Yaoundé government pressed on with its diabolic plan to perpetuate dictatorship, corruption and marginalization, Southern Cameroonian fighters were also gradually putting in place a mechanism to ensure that Southern Cameroons gained its independence.

A fighter who spoke to the Cameroon Concord News Group’s London correspondent on condition of anonymity said that all the factions were quietly working together, adding that they were gradually putting their differences behind them; an action that was enabling them to put in place a tough mechanism that would enable them to monitor all those who would be voting in a proscribed election.

The fighter added that there was a silver lining emerging on the dark cloud of division that had given army soldiers the feeling that they were winning the war.

He advised that the slaughtering of three army soldiers in Ekondo-titi prior to the charade was just a clear statement of intent, adding that more killings of Yaoundé government officials were in the offing.

He stressed that the Yaoundé government had used all its resources to divide Southern Cameroonians but its efforts were not yielding the fruits the government was looking forward to.

“We move sophisticated weapons into Cameroon with relative easy. We have struck fear in the minds of the officials and soldiers and most of them are looking forward to the day this nightmare will be over,” he said.

Yesterday’s voice note clearly stated that chiefs, fons, senators, members of parliament, mayors and municipal councilors would be targeted for their role in enabling the corrupt Yaoundé government.

Another fighter, who elected anonymity, said that anybody in Fako Division who thinks that sending people of Northwest decent out of the Southwest region was the solution was simply mistaken.

The Southwest is carefully monitored by Southwesterners and all arrests in the Southwest are made by honest and hard-working sons and daughters of the Southwest region, he said.

He stressed that the fighters would mount pressure on chiefs and fons who have turned their backs on their people until they flee Southern Cameroons.

“These traitors are no longer worthy of the people’s confidence. They have sold their souls to the enemy and they do not deserve to inhabit our land,” he stressed.

In the coming days, we will be conducting a clean-up campaign against our traitors. Anybody who voted must lose sleep. They have violated the law of the land and they all know they are facing the death penalty, he underscored.

“We cannot let these infidels to keep on walking around as if they are lords. We have ensured that fake politicians like Peter Mafany Musonge, Yang Philemon, Dion Ngute, Elvis Ngole Ngole, Atanga Nji, Achidi Achu, George Tabetando and their surrogates do not come to our land to display their ill-gotten wealth. They know what would befall them if they dared to go to their villages. The death penalty still stands and the law is the law,” he said.

“Our colleagues in Mamfe are already on the trails of their preys and in the days ahead, we will be delivering good news. Our colleagues who are watching over the city of Bamenda are also manufacturing good news and Southern Cameroonians will be proud of us. We must get even with these political prostitutes who think more of themselves and less of the people,” he concluded.

By Soter Tarh Agbaw-Ebai with contributions from Rita Akana in Yaounde and Ashu Agbor Nkongho in Mamfe

Football: French coach and ex-Liverpool manager Gérard Houllier dies at 73

14, December 2020

Football: French coach and ex-Liverpool manager Gérard Houllier dies at 73 0

Former France manager Gerard Houllier, who also coached Olympique Lyonnais, Paris Saint-Germain and Liverpool, has died, local media reported on Monday.

RMC sport and sports daily L’Équipe said he had died aged 73 after having a heart operation in Paris.

Houllier had a long history of heart problems, dating back to when he was rushed to hospital at halftime of a Premier League game between Liverpool and Leeds United in 2001.

After an insignificant playing career in France’s lower leagues, Houllier began coaching in 1973, earning his first big job with Lens before taking over at Paris Saint-Germain.

He became France’s assistant coach in 1988 and then manager in 1992 but had a short, unsuccessful spell in charge and resigned after failing to take the team to the 1994 World Cup in the United States.

France have qualified for every World Cup since then, lifting the trophy in 1998 and 2018.

Houllier focused on youth coaching immediately after the World Cup debacle but rebuilt his reputation at Liverpool, where he won the FA Cup, League Cup and UEFA Cup in 2001.

He also had success back in France with Lyon, leading them to back-to-back Ligue 1 titles.

He returned to management after taking a break in 2010 with Aston Villa but left the role the following year following further heart troubles.

Source: REUTERS

Trump Administration has failed Cameroonian asylum-seekers

14, December 2020

Trump Administration has failed Cameroonian asylum-seekers 0

When Franklin Agbor, a former Cameroonian gendarme, disobeyed an order to kill civilians, he was labeled a turncoat. Agbor was patrolling in Cameroon’s Southwest region, which Anglophone separatists regard as part of a breakaway state; his decision not to pull the trigger on behalf of the national government carried a death sentence. With his life in imminent danger under President Paul Biya’s authoritarian regime, the soldier had no choice but to flee Cameroon.

Within weeks, Agbor, 33, left behind his wife and two young children and flew to Ecuador via Nigeria. He traveled up through Central America to Mexico, braving mountains and jungles. Finally, in October 2019, he surrendered himself to the United States for asylum at the Laredo border crossing. Agbor fled to “pursue a brighter future,” said his brother-in-law, Nzombella Atemlefack, who lives in the United States.

But that isn’t what he found. Instead, Agbor spent 13 months in detention at Jackson Parish Correctional Center in Louisiana, denied asylum and parole. His treatment there was “without a conscience,” Atemlefack said. In detention amid the coronavirus pandemic, Agbor faced high-risk conditions—minimal access to medical treatment, no social distancing, no personal protective equipment, and no testing—even as his peers contracted COVID-19. And like other Cameroonian asylum-seekers, Agbor was beaten by immigration officers who forced him to sign his own deportation papers.

Since Cameroon descended into civil war in 2016, more than 400,000 people have fled ethnic and political persecution, with thousands seeking asylum in the United States. Many have instead been detained by Immigration and Customs Enforcement (ICE), suffering conditions that advocates say flout international norms for the treatment of refugees—and reflect glaring inequities for Black migrants in the immigration system. Despite civil demonstrations led by Cameroonians in ICE facilities across the country this year, the poor conditions have only intensified.

The inhumane treatment comes despite the role of the United States in Cameroon’s civil war. In addition to their colonial legacies, Western countries have fanned the flames of the crisis by indirectly bankrolling the persecution of Anglophones with funds for infrastructure and counterterrorism operations. In 2018, while the White House denounced Biya’s administration, the United States donated military helicopters, turboprop jets, and drones to his arsenal. Cameroonians have fled a crisis shaped in part by the West only to be met with hostility on American shores.

Still, those who remain in the United States could be considered lucky. Since October, ICE has deported dozens of Cameroonians: On Oct. 13, 57 Cameroonians were repatriated and handed over to military custody, and on Nov. 11, 37 more—including Agbor—followed. Placed in maximum-security prisons, none has been heard from since, according to families. Several have gone missing. Advocates say another deportation flight is scheduled for Dec. 15.

After the first deportations, several U.S. lawmakers signed letters expressing “grave concerns” over the situation for Cameroonian detainees and ICE’s conduct. In November, Rep. Karen Bass introduced a House resolution demanding an immediate halt to the expulsions and a Department of Justice investigation into the allegations. But as the abuses and the deportations continue, the fate of Cameroonian asylum-seekers shows how the politicized U.S. immigration system has chosen militarization over mercy.

The furor started in Texas. In February, 140 Cameroonian women protested conditions including medical neglect at T. Don Hutto detention center, which has previously come under FBI scrutiny for sexual abuse allegations. Detainees in other facilities soon joined in, galvanized by the potentially fatal consequences of COVID-19. Between March and August, Cameroonians organized hunger strikes against discriminatory treatment and a lack of pandemic precautions in Pine Prairie, a Louisiana facility. In September, Pauline Binam, a Cameroonian woman, was one of the whistleblowers in allegations of forced hysterectomies and other medical abuse while being held at a Georgia ICE facility.

“It seemed like ICE had enough of us,” said Martha Nfonteh, an advocate with the Cameroon American Council whose brother participated in the Pine Prairie protests.

Since the protests, detainees say that things have only gotten worse. Godlove Nswohnonomi, a welder who fled Cameroon in 2018 after getting caught in the crossfire of the conflict, joined the Pine Prairie protests after more than a year in ICE custody—feeling that the poor conditions in the facility put his life “in clear danger.” But he watched as his comrades were pepper sprayed, beaten, placed in solitary confinement, and threatened with deportation. “The way [the ICE officers] looked at us and talked to us, we felt very threatened,” Nswohnonomi said.

Across the country, detainees have experienced a similar pattern of physical violence, emotional abuse, and medical neglect. Of the 23 detainees interviewed by Foreign Policy over the past two months, almost all had similar stories: punishment by ICE officers, the lack of due process, and the inability to seek justice in a court system that appears to be against them. Twelve have since been deported. (ICE officials did not respond to multiple requests for comment on these and other allegations.)

To accelerate these deportations, ICE has used coercive measures to force detainees to sign their own papers—supposedly accepting their deportation before they are expelled. By September, ICE was separating the Pine Prairie protesters, sending them to facilities in far-flung states. Ivo Fogap, who participated in the protests, found himself on a bus to LaSalle, another Louisiana detention facility for those facing imminent expulsion. The bus was packed, and several detainees had symptoms consistent with COVID-19. That’s when Fogap says he understood ICE’s intent: “to put our lives in danger by staying here.”

ICE has a history of medical mismanagement: In 2017, a report by the Department of Homeland Security’s Office of Inspector General described problems with medical care that “undermine the protection of detainees’ rights, their humane treatment, and the provision of a safe and healthy environment.” “Before COVID, our immigration system had already been making people sicker,” said Amy Zeidan, a physician and co-founder of the Society of Asylum Medicine, which conducts medical evaluations for detainees. “The virus has only made things worse.”

At LaSalle, several individuals were immediately placed in isolation, and the rest were sent to a 70-person dormitory, where many developed high fevers and coughs. One detainee, Valdano Tebid, said he experienced COVID-19 symptoms, but it took six days for him to receive a diagnosis, during which he likely exposed his dormmates. He was released back into the general population after 10 days in quarantine—less time than the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention recommended. Leonard Ataubo, a 23-year-old detainee who was diagnosed with stomach cancer at Pine Prairie, has yet to see a doctor since his diagnosis or begin treatment for the disease, which puts him at high risk of severe illness from COVID-19.

At Prairieland, a Texas facility, detainees report similar conditions. Anonymous callers to a hotline maintained by the advocacy group Freedom for Immigrants have reported that ICE officers have forced them to drink water out of the toilet, punished them in solitary confinement, physically abused them, and denied them adequate treatment for COVID-19. After a transfer to River Correctional Center in Louisiana, Nswohnonomi tested positive for tuberculosis in July, which he believes he contracted while in ICE detention at Pine Prairie. The disease makes him more vulnerable to COVID-19, but he has not received any medicine—a doctor told him he would be deported soon anyway, he said.

The experiences of Cameroonian asylum-seekers reflect broader inequities faced by Black migrants to the United States. Immigration officers have historically used punitive actions, such as solitary confinement, against detained Black migrants at rates up to six times higher than the rest of the population. Likewise, medical mismanagement and neglect may disproportionately affect Black migrants subject to the unconscious biases of medical practitioners.

Despite the extraordinary conditions and health risks, legal recourse has been elusive for Cameroonian detainees. Pandemic-related court closures have delayed and canceled hearings, leaving parole, probation, bond, and humanitarian release out of reach—even for those with conditions that make them more vulnerable to COVID-19 and therefore eligible for release. Officers deemed several detainees simply “ineligible”: Parole was reserved for pregnant women and children or for those with immediate family in the United States, they said—statements that are inconsistent with ICE policy.

Sylvie Bello, the founder of the Cameroon American Council, suspects that there are financial motives for the private corporations that operate the facilities—as well as for the remote regions where the facilities are major local employers and consumers. “Those little itty-bitty Louisiana towns have been profiting off Black bodies from slavery onward,” Bello said. “Immigrant detention is just the latest iteration.”

The detainees’ accounts fit historical patterns. In fiscal 2020, median bond granted to Cameroonians was 25 percent more expensive compared with the broader population facing immigration proceedings. Black migrants are also more likely to face expulsion than other populations in removal proceedings. And in recent months, Cameroonians have increasingly faced other barriers. According to the Transactional Records Access Clearinghouse, the asylum denial rate for Cameroonians has skyrocketed, from around 19 percent in 2019 to around 45 percent in 2020. The deportation rate of Cameroonians has also shot up, from 22 percent in fiscal 2019 to 35 percent in fiscal 2020.

Moreover, advocates fear that ICE has deliberately transferred Cameroonians to antagonistic legal districts. For example, every judge on the immigration court in Jena, Louisiana—with a jurisdiction that stretches across the state—denies asylum at rates of 90 percent or higher. Nathan Bogart, an immigration attorney who frequently works with the court, said that its “harsh” approach symbolizes recent changes that have weaponized Southern courts for deportation. “There have always been questions about whether people of color are treated differently,” Bogart said, citing the court as one reason that Black migrants face an “uphill battle” to asylum.

Calisus Fon, an asylum-seeker detained at the Rio Grande Detention Center in Texas, called the system “pure racism.” His initial credible fear interview—the key step toward asylum—was approved, but over a dozen appeals for his release have been ignored or denied since. Meanwhile, Central American friends in the facility have been granted parole. “All of this effort to send me back home just means they want me to die,” Fon said. “I guess that is why they are treating us how they are here, too.”

On Nov. 11, Fon joined Agbor, Fogap, and dozens of others when he was deported to Cameroon. His pleas to be sent anywhere else were denied. “These people came to America in one piece,” Nfonteh, whose brother remains detained, said. “They are going back broken, body and soul.”

Culled from Foreign Policy

Southern Cameroons Crisis: Fon of Babanki in Amba drag-net

14, December 2020

Southern Cameroons Crisis: Fon of Babanki in Amba drag-net 0

The Fon of Babanki His Royal Highness Uiyuoh Nelson Sheteh is reportedly under protective custody in a secret location since Saturday, December 12, 2020 by Ambazonia Restoration Forces not yet identified by the Southern Cameroons Interim Government.

The French Cameroun civil administrator in the area recently observed that “no one knows for the moment where the traditional ruler is, or even if he is still alive. The only information available so far is that he disappeared on Saturday, December 12, 2020.”

However, corroborating sources revealed that he was taken away from his palace by armed Southern Cameroons security forces who had cautioned the Fon over his dealings with the French Cameroun government in Yaoundé.

We understand the Fon was among the few Southern Cameroons traditional authorities who participated in the so-called regional elections that were banned in the Federal Republic of Ambazonia by the Interim Government.

French Cameroun media houses have painted the case as “kidnapping” but people in the know have hinted our informants in Bamenda that the Fon is presently being interrogated by elements of the Ambazonia Secret Service.

By Fon Lawrence in Bamenda   

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