4, September 2019
French Cameroun tyrant Paul Biya hiding in Mvomeka’a 0
The Yaoundé tyrant Paul Biya is reportedly hiding in a bunker he built some three hundred kilometers away from his palace in his native village of Mvomeka’s after rumour of a military coup spread like wild fire in the nation’s capital over the week end it’s been claimed.
The despot left Yaoundé by military convoy mounted by his kinsmen in the Francophone dominated army and is holed up at a bunker in the outskirts of his village.
A well placed source hinted Cameroon Intelligence Report that Biya is inside a room receiving treatment from his private doctors who are presently in the country.
Family relations of both President Biya and first lady Chantal Biya are effectively running Cameroon in his absence as he is banned from making phone calls due to ill health. The dictator’s lavish palaces in Yaounde and Mvomeka’a can no longer provide protection to the ailing leader.
Meanwhile members of the Biya family both in Cameroon and abroad have begun hiding the leader’s financial assets alongside those belonging to his wife, Chantal Biya in the hope of protecting the money when he is gone.
Cameroon Intelligence Report informants have tracked the Cameroon military moving two presidential helicopters from their bases in Yaounde to Mvomeka’a.
Thousands of Southern Cameroonians have been killed ever since President Biya declared war against the English speaking community in the country. The Ambazonia Vice President Dabney Yerima said on Monday that a forceful response to the French Cameroun military onslaught was the only way forward as both Yaoundé and the Southern Cameroons Interim Government battle for control over Ambazonia.
By Soter Tarh Agbaw-Ebai




















4, September 2019
Cameroon deploys 6th contingent of troops to troubled Central African Republic 0
Cameroon on Tuesday sent its sixth contingent of troops to restive Central African Republic (CAR) to join UN peacekeeping forces mission focused on the stabilization and protection of civilian population.
Speaking at a send-off ceremony in the capital city, Yaounde, Cameroon’s Defense Minister Joseph Beti Assomo highlighted the peace efforts of Cameroonian troops in the CAR.
“Always determined to fulfill its regional and international commitments as concerns collective security in an honorable, decent and effective manner, the troops have provided the CAR with multifaceted support in order to enable the country to get its institutions which have already been damaged for several years now back on its feet,” Assomo said.
The soldiers are to contribute to the return of peace and stability while strictly respecting UN regulation of impartiality and respect for human rights during their mission, the minister said.
According to Assomo, the sixth contingent comprises 750 soldiers and 350 staff members of the National Gendarmerie.
The contingent is part of the UN Multidimensional Integrated Stabilization Mission in the Central African Republic (MINUSCA) which started in 2014 to protect CAR civilians under the UN Charter.
The contingent is taking over from predecessors who spent a year building peace in the war-torn country.
The conflicts still in progress in CAR started in 2013 following a violent takeover of power by the armed group Seleka, meaning coalition in Sango, CAR’s national language.
Source: Xinhuanet