10, February 2019
Southern Cameroons: Secretary Chris Anu’s departure is regrettable but acceptable 0
Yesterday’s resignation of Secretary Chris Anu from the Interim Government of Ambazonia as Secretary of State for Communication sent shock waves through the spine of the nation. The news was unanticipated. Secretary Chris Anu has been a great embodiment of our struggle. His passion and dedication to our struggle will never be forgotten. His trip to Nigeria when Sissiku Julius AyukTabe and his team were abducted in January 2018 put in motion the reaction and support we enjoyed from the UN and international media. His messages, full of passion connected the diaspora with ground zero. He was the voice of a new nation. His numerous interviews on international media, clearly articulated the Ambazonia plight.
As the dust settles on his shock departure, many have been asking why this course of action. Why now? This media group has been briefed from the heart of government that HE Sissiku Julius Ayuk Tabe has instructed the IG on courses of action to follow for the benefit of the struggle. Without getting into much detail on this issue, we have been allowed the information that Secretary Chris Anu questioned the mental health of HE Sissiku Ayuk Tabe, and the other leaders in jail as they have been in incarceration for over twelve months. We can report that at the meeting, Chris Anu uttered ‘‘you AyukTabe will not lead from jail’’.
Whilst we take the view that Secretary Chris Anu is right to raise any concerns he has in a democracy, it’s worth noting that Sissiku Ayuk Tabe is still the leader of our nation and still chairs and leads our Ambazonian government. As Secretary Chris Anu isn’t persuaded that HE Sissiku Ayuk Tabe should be leading this struggle at this point, it was regrettable but honourable for him to tender his resignation.
It can be argued that this struggle took a turn for the better when our leadership team was abducted in Nigeria. As a nation, we have become stronger and more resilient. This struggle is bigger than any individual. The struggle will lament his departure but the ancestors of Ambaland will bless us with another gifted Communication Secretary in the coming days
Cameroon Concord News Group readers voted for Chris Anu as Person of the year in 2018. Our editorial desk, reporters and readers around the globe would like to thank Chris Anu for his contribution to the Ambazonia struggle and wish him well in all his future endeavours. Our world is a better place because he served the Federal Republic of Ambazonia but the struggle we now face as a nation will continue.
Sessekou Asu Isong,
Cameroon Concord News Group, London Editor

















10, February 2019
Biya should free Maurice Kamto 0
The Feb. 6 front-page article “Cameroon’s lethal linguistic fault line” effectively documented the brutality of the attacks by President Paul Biya’s government on the Cameroonian English-speaking community and reported the arrest of human rights lawyer Felix Agbor Nkongho. However, the article failed to mention the arrest in Douala on Jan. 28 by the Biya government of former presidential candidate Maurice Kamto, head of the Movement for the Renaissance of Cameroon, and several of his supporters.
A respected professor of international law, former dean of the faculty of Juridical and Political Sciences at University of Yaoundé II, and former chairman and special rapporteur of the U.N. International Law Commission, Mr. Kamto is charged with offenses that include treason, inciting violence and disruption of public peace, and that could result in the death penalty. He and his other jailed supporters are reported to have begun a hunger strike.
Mr. Kamto’s arrest has led to calls for his immediate release and concern for his well-being by the U.N. secretary general, the International Law Commission, Amnesty International, the Institut de Droit International, the Curatorium of The Hague Academy of International Law, on which Mr. Kamto serves, and many other international human rights groups. The United States, through its ambassador in Yaoundé, should make clear that it strongly supports Mr. Kamto’s immediate release and that his continued detention will lead promptly to a comprehensive reevaluation of U.S. military and other assistance to the Cameroonian government.
Washington Post