18, April 2025
Abdul Karim Ali: Southern Cameroons activist sentenced to life in prison 0
The Francophone dominated Yaoundé Military Tribunal has sentenced renowned Muslim scholar and activist Abdul Karim Ali to life in prison in a case considered by many international observers as politically motivated.
Abdul Karim has already spent more than two years in prison without being convicted.
He was found guilty of lame and ridiculous charges related to the Southern Cameroons uprising that started in 2016.
Karim denied the charges and in May 2024, he announced that he did not recognize the jurisdiction of the Yaoundé military court.
Abdul Karim Ali was sentenced on Wednesday 16 April by the Yaoundé military tribunal in absentia.
The Abdul Karim-Cameroon government affair all started with a video he recorded on 9 July 2022, in which he accused a military official of torturing civilians.
Two of his friends are also being held because of their links with him. All three were officially remanded in custody on 2 February 2023 on charges of ‘hostility towards the homeland’, ‘failure to report’, “secession” and ‘rebellion’.
Karim Ali and two of his co-defendants had already appeared several times before the Yaoundé military court. At the third hearing, they were officially remanded in custody by the examining magistrate.
Karim Ali’s conviction has already provoked numerous reactions from the Southern Cameroons public including the diaspora.
By Soter Tarh Agbaw-Ebai





















18, April 2025
World Bank to inject extra CFA20bn into Cameroon’s Social Safety Program 0
The World Bank has announced an additional CFA20 billion (about $35 million) in funding for Cameroon’s adaptive social safety net and economic inclusion project. The funds will help support vulnerable families affected by the 2024 floods in the Far North region.
Cheick Fantamady Kanté, the World Bank’s Country Director for Cameroon, made the announcement on April 14 during a portfolio review meeting with government officials in Yaoundé. He said the extra funding is in its final stages of preparation and will be used to strengthen emergency support for about 100,000 more households in need.
With this new commitment, total funding for the program will rise to roughly CFA166 billion. Of that, the World Bank will have provided CFA112 billion, with the remaining CFA54 billion coming from Cameroon’s national budget. The program was originally designed to help 356,000 people between 2023 and 2028. The new funds are expected to push that number even higher.
Launched in December 2023, the project marks the second phase of Cameroon’s broader social safety net strategy, which began in 2013. Like the first phase, it aims to support the country’s poorest households and promote entrepreneurship among young people between the ages of 18 and 35, especially in cities.
The project is structured around five core components. First, it offers regular cash transfers to low-income families, combined with basic guidance to help them become more resilient and productive. Second, it includes emergency cash payments for families affected by climate shocks, conflict, or large-scale displacement. Third, it provides money in exchange for participation in labor-intensive public works programs in both rural and urban areas.
The fourth component targets urban youth working in the informal sector, helping them launch small income-generating activities as a way to survive through self-employment.
Finally, the program also offers financial and technical support for young entrepreneurs with viable business plans, aiming to help them bring their ideas to life and join the formal economy.
Source: Business in Cameroon