Thursday, February 12, 2026

Unveiling Tomorrow's Cameroon Through Today's News

Breaking

Tchiroma Spokeswoman Debunks Talks, Rules Out Local Elections

[YAOUNDÉ, Jan 15, 2026 — Cameroon Concord] — Persistent rumours circulating in Francophone media and on social networks alleging that...
Cameroonian Arrested at U.S. Airport — Why Green Cards No Longer Guarantee Safety
Cameroonian Arrested at U.S. Airport in Trump Immigration Sweep

Cameroonian Arrested as Trump Uses Green Cards Against Immigrants

[ST. LOUIS, UNITED STATES, Jan 12, 2026] — The detention of a Cameroonian lawful permanent resident at a U.S. airport has...

Issa Tchiroma Bakary’s New Year Address: A Promise of Change and National Renewal

In a powerful New Year’s Eve message addressed to Cameroonians at home and abroad, Issa Tchiroma Bakary delivered a speech...

POLITICS | From Cameroon to Cape Verde: Fabrice Lena’s Account After His Escape from Douala Prison

DOUALA / PRAIA — Detained on 5 November at the New Bell Central Prison in Douala, Cameroonian opposition activist Fabrice Lena...
President-Elect Issa Tchiroma Bakary issues a decisive “Letter to the Nation” as political momentum builds around his movement.
IIssa Tchiroma Bakary delivers national address on November 17, 2025.

Tchiroma’s “Letter to the Nation” Shifts Political Landscape

Cameroon’s political trajectory shifted sharply on Monday after President-Elect Issa Tchiroma Bakary released a sweeping Letter to...
Alice Nkom appointed spokesperson of Issa Tchiroma’s elected presidency after disputed 2025 elections.
Barrister Alice Nkom is appointed spokesperson of the Elected Presidency as Issa Tchiroma prepares the next phase of resistance.

President-Elect Tchiroma Takes Bold Step, Names Fearless Home-Base Lawyer Alice Nkom as Official Spokesperson

The political map of Cameroon is shifting beneath the regime’s feet. What began as a challenge to a fraudulent election is...

Cameroon Standoff Hardens After Disputed Election

DOUALA, Nov. 17, 2025 — Cameroon Concord.The October 12 presidential election was supposed to reset Cameroon’s political clock....

Tragedy in Southeastern Congo: 32 Dead in Mine Bridge Fall

A bridge at the Kalando copper and cobalt mine in Mulondo, Lualaba province, collapsed on Saturday, killing at least 32 people and...

Cameroon’s Counterfeit Diplomacy: Biya’s Forged “Messages of Congratulations”

  The world must not treat these acts of diplomatic brigandage as a mere aberration. The African Union should invoke Article 30 of...

Confirmed: Hon. Joseph MBAH NDAM, Vice President of La Republique National Assembly Resigns to Reconvene at Buea.

I

n an interview granted to the Cameroon Journal, CJ, the SDF MP for Batibo who is one of the Vice Presidents of La Republique National Assembly thundered; "... I think that by 1st of October, this matter should be over. We should be looking at Buea, not Yaounde... I don't doubt it. I have been much in this issue since 1990.... and this is the breaking point.... its a very considered opinion. I'm talking to you from Batibo, my hometown. And the people who voted me came to me. I cannot be against the people - my people..."

Find below, the interview in its entirety.

---

Cameroon Journal, CJ: Hello honorable. Good evening sir. I hope you can get me now well clearly. We were struggling to speak on IMO app.

Hon. Mbah Ndam: Yes.

CJ : This is Chris ANU. We have spoken before in the past. Its been a while. This is Cameroon Journal. Yes, sir, I just listened to a statement that you made at the rally there in Batibo early today. You made the statement that you are not returning to Yaounde till you know the direction that your people were taking. What did you mean by that? You mean you are withdrawing from Parliament? Is that what you meant?

Hon. Mbah Ndam: Of course, when I say that until I know what my people are becoming, I am believing that by the 1st of October, this thing should be over.

CJ: Oh that's wonderful. Basically, you are saying that, 'I am not a parliamentarian in La Republique du CameroUn...or'

...Chris ANU seems not to have completed his emphasis when Mbah Ndam hurriedly came in.

Mbah Ndam: You have heard me say it. I don't want you people to put more words into it.

CJ: No...If I understand you. When you say up till 1st of Obctober, what do you mean?

Hon. Mbah Ndam: I mean that, I think that by 1st of October, this matter should be over. We should be looking at Buea, not Yaounde.

CJ: Oh, okay. So what happens if by October 2nd, we are still talking about the Republic of Cameroun including Southern Cameroons - you will go back to Yaounde?

Hon. Mbah Ndam: Why do you doubt that? I don't doubt it. I have put in much in this issue since 1990.... and this is the breaking point.

CJ: So what moved you today to have taken this position? Did you premeditate over that or it just occurred to you?

Hon. Mbah Ndam: Its a very considered opinion. I'm talking to you from Batibo, my hometown. And the people who voted me came to me. I cannot be against the people - my people.

CJ: Have you consulted with the leaders of the SDF?

Hon. Mbah Ndam: That's another ball game. That's one's responsibility. I have taken my responsibility. At the party level.

CJ: Would you expect other SDF and CPDM Parliamentarians of the Southern Cameroons to resign?

Hon. Mbah Ndam : I am not prepared to answer question for others. Because I do not like those insinuations. I am here in my village. I have been here for more than two weeks now to listen to my people and I have made my pronouncements and you people have it on record and you saw the population. There should be no conjectures.

CJ: No, I mean. I'm only asking a question. Have you spoken to the chairman of the SDF since you took this position today?

Hon. Mbah Ndam: I have not yet spoken to anybody of my party. I have taken a decision of mine.

CJ: Have they reached out to you?

Hon. Mbah Ndam: Not yet because we are still in turbulence. You being outside do not know how it is going in here. I have lost PHS Batibo. It has been burnt down today in broad day light. And I keep grappling with the children who had gone there; let them go back to their parents or from wherever they came.

Southern CameroonsView all

Can Biya’s Courts Deliver Justice for the Nera 10?

[YAOUNDÉ, Dec 18] — Today, the Nera 10 appear before Cameroon’s Supreme Court, marking a critical moment not only for ten imprisoned men, but for the credibility of the country’s entire judicial system. This is not merely a procedural step in a long-running case; it is a reckoning with years of...