Politics
Many onlookers have described the consortium of two parents as a device by the government to divide and weaken the struggle. They say the two army officials who make up the consortium may have been carefully selected on purpose.
According to Hermine Massah, a Political Scientist, the tactics used by the adversary to the Anglophone struggle are similar to those used by Satan himself. She says the two individuals who make up the consortium may have been blackmailed.
“These tactics are exactly what the Satan uses to destroy the unity of people of this world. I think the government has chosen these two individuals on the grounds that they are high ranking army officers; that the population can do no harm to them. These two individuals may be doing this service to the government out of their own will. The sole reason for all of this drama is to divide and weaken the struggle” says Hermine. “Nevertheless the two man consortium is illegal and evil” she adds.
Others say they are waiting to see the faces of the two traitors who make up the so called consortium of parents on April 21 2017 at the Bamenda Court of First Instance.
- Details
- Mbi James
- Hits: 2312
Barrister Achu Juilius accuses the Bishops and Principals of Catholic Churches of sending him dead threats; says they should not play mute.
The highly controversial Barrister, Achu Julius, who is defending the strange 2 man consortium of Parents, has openly accused the catholic church of issuing him dead threats.
The man, termed by many as the “black leg lawyer”, continues to insist that the Catholic Church must pay damages to parents.
Barrister Achu Juilius says “Some Parents want that the church should give them guarantee that whenever schools reopen, they will not pay fee again. Some parents prefer that they should give their money now for them to send their kids to other schools. But Bishops and Principals of most of these mission schools decide to block reimbursing the money and just play mute service and say nothing. They were asked to put a notice to reimburse money or open up the schools, they said nothing. And now when they receive direct summons, they make as if t is something very strange and new; until they are sending me dead threats. After the direct summons, I started seeing my picture on social media with a red cross on my head that I am wanted dead or alive”.
- Details
- Rita Akana
- Hits: 2376
UNITED NATIONS, April 15 – While Cameroon has cut off the Internet to the Anglophone regions for over 80 days, the UN has characterized criticism of its officials' cover ups to be "harassment" and has repeatedly refused to answer Inner City Press' questions about it, see below, after the UN Department of Public Information evicted and continues to restrict Inner City Press, petition here, update here. In early April the UN Office of the Spokesperson run by holdover Stephane Dujarric told Inner City Press, we've heard you questions, if we have anything to add we'll let you know. Video here. Even that was a lie: UN envoy Lonseny Fall went again to the country, with this purporting to be his statement, and read-out here. But what has it come to? Consider this court prosecution of clergy, to try to put an end to legitimate protest. The UN so far has issued a weak, late statement then tried to move on, calling any criticism harassment and continuing to hinder coverage of the UN's deeds and misdeeds. We'll have more on this.
On April 13, Inner City Press asked UN Spokesman Dujarric, video here, UN transcript here: Inner City Press: can you confirm that the Secretary-General sought to speak with Paul Biya while he was on an extended stay in Geneva, as has been reported?
Spokesman: No, I have no confirmation of a call having taken place.
Inner City Press: I mean, I'm not asking [inaudible]…
Spokesman: I have no information.
Inner City Press: Okay. And I wanted to know, people there saying, even in the wake of the visit of Louncény Fall, that, for example, a Supreme Court Justice, Paul Ayah remains, was only today, you know, remanded to remain in prison. So they're not seeing much changes. And I'm wondering, is this something that… that Mr. Louncény Fall looked into while he was there, the continued detention of barristers and those who have advocated for fair treatment of [inaudible]?
Spokesman: What I just said is, in fact, that, in his contacts with the Government, Mr Louncény Fall advocated for the release of a number of Anglophone leaders and others. So I think that's clear that's one of the things he was advocating for.
Inner City Press: And, finally, I wanted to ask you about the Resident Coordinator position. Given that the previous Resident Coordinator didn't raise any of the issues that you've just mentioned while she was there, is there any progress on naming a new one…
Spokesman: I don't know that, and I don't know if you know that, but okay. Anyway, next… what's your question?
Inner City Press: The people that are there say it, and she also blocked the press…
Spokesman: I think she blocks you, but…
Question: Yeah, she does.
Spokesman: …that's her right.
Inner City Press: In what capacity does she block it?
Spokesman: Well, I think anyone who has seen your tweets, I think, sometimes they do cross the line, I think, into harassment, and people block you from time to time.
Inner City Press: Interesting.
Spokesman: Indeed.
How trustworthy is today's UN if they stonewall then withhold information, while continuing to block - a la Najat Rochdi - and restrict the Press which asks about Cameroon and denial of the right to information? On April 12 when there was a press conference at the UN about the death penalty, Inner City Press asked the panelist from Amnesty International about the Paul Biya government's threat of the death penalty against Anglophone advocates, including the UN's own former legal adviser Felix Agbar-Balla. The AI speaker said Inner City Press knew more about Cameroon, but that AI is concerned. We hope so - about the outrageous ongoing Internet cut as well. Watch this site.
On April 5, Inner City Press asked the UN Spokesperson's Office, Associate Spokesperson Eri Kaneko, what if anything the UN has done about the Internet cut. Video here. From the UN's transcript:
Inner City Press: there are issues in Cameroon. There are a number of issues of the Anglophone areas, but there's one in particular, which is now an 80-day cut-off of the internet to two regions of the country. So, in the answers that have been provided about what [Francois] Loncény Fall has done, there's no reference to this pretty open-and-shut issue. Is there some way you can either ask DPA [Department of Political Affairs] or his office, like, what's being done on this? Does the UN… has the UN in any way conveyed to the Government of Cameroon that whatever the other issues are that turning off the internet to whole regions of the country is not a good idea?
Associate Spokesperson: We heard your question, and if we have anything to add further, we'll let you know.
Further? Nothing has been done.
The day before on April 4, Agnes Marcaillou, Director of the United Nations Mine Action Service, mentioned work in Cameroon so Inner City Press asked about it and the Internet cut. Video here. She replied that "we all read Inner City Press" and for that reason know about the Internet cut, but her answer was about Boko Haram. We'll have more on this.
On March 31, Inner City Press put a question about the outrage of Cameroon saying it will accede to the UN "electronic communications" treaty while denying such communications to millions of people to UN Spokesman Farhan Haq, video here, UN transcript here:
Inner City Press: Given that the internet has been turned off to millions of people for 76 days, I noticed that the Government says that it’s going to be depositing a ratification of something called a UN convention on the use of electronic communications in international contracts. And I wanted to know, will the Secretariat… do they have any role in… in… in reviewing the sort of legitimacy of ratifications or… or… what would you say about a country that’s turned off the internet to its own population depositing a ratification to an electronic communications convention at that time?
Deputy Spokesman: Those are separate issues. Regarding treaties, all treaties are looked at to see whether the instruments… whether the treaties are properly filed as they’re being deposited.
How could this one be "properly filed"? But the UN's strategy has been to use Cristina "The Evicter" Gallach to restrict Inner City Press' access to cover the UN on such issues, even now that she has ostensibly left. We'll have more on this. Inner City Press also asked who represents the UN in Cameroon:
Inner City Press: I’d sent you a number of questions about Cameroon. Now I have those and something else. First of all, I wanted to know, what’s the… what is the status of having a resident coordinator in the country, given that the internet has been turned off to two regions in the country for 76 days?
Deputy Spokesman: Right now, there is an officer-in-charge. There’s no new full-time resident coordinator, but there’s an officer-in-charge there.
Question: Can you say who that is or which agency it is?
Deputy Spokesman: I believe it’s the officer for UNICEF (United Nations Children’s Fund) right now.
But when Inner City Press later on March 31 visited UNICEF's Cameroon website to follow up, the most recent report was from 2012, and the top two press releases were about Nigeria, here. We'll have more on this, and on the UN's failing "Resident Coordinator system." On the afternoon of Friday, March 31 the UN sent Inner City Press this, stating that its UNOCA envoy Francois Lonseny Fall intends to visit Cameroon in early April, and other responses which we immediately publish in full: "Your questions on Cameroon: The United Nations Secretariat continues to follow closely the situation in the Republic of Cameroon through the United Nations Regional Office for Central Africa (UNOCA). The Office of the United Nations High Commissioner for Human Rights (OHCHR) has been monitoring the court proceedings and allegations of human rights violations. We are concerned about the trial of civilians by a military court. The High Commissioner for Human Rights has raised these concerns with the Government of Cameroon in a letter dated 24 February 2017. In our various contacts, we have called on the authorities to address the situation in a measured and peaceful manner, while abiding by their international human rights commitments. SRSG Fall has visited Cameroon several times to address these issues and plans to visit Cameroon in early April, subject to confirmation of meetings, to engage with the Government and reiterate the availability of the United Nations to support national efforts to promote an inclusive dialogue in order to address the root causes of the crisis, while respecting the territorial integrity and unity of the Republic of Cameroon. With regard to the two specific cases cited, we have confirmed that Robert Fon was indeed released on bail on 27 March. We understand that Mr. Felix Agbor Nkongho, as his two co-accused (Fontem Afoteka Neba and Mancho Bibixy), is facing trial for various alleged offences in connection with the situation in the Anglophone regions. Their lawyers requested they be freed on bail. The court is reportedly set to examine the request when the case is taken up again on 7 April. Concerning reports of the closure by the Government of a TV station in Western region of Cameroon, we are continuing our efforts to verify the allegation."
As reported on March 30 by Inner City Press, Cameroon says it is poised to ratify the UN's Convention on the Use of Electronic Communications in International Contracts, adopted on November 23, 2005 in New York. How could the UN accept and deposit such a ratification? Cameroonian Minister of Trade, Lucile Magloire Mbarga Atangana cited the United Nations Commission on International Trade Law or UNCITRAL, one of the entities routinely meeting in UN conference rooms with little notice by the UN-facilitated media. This must change. When Cameroon forced refugees back into Nigeria, the UN rightly complained. Why not, then, of Cameroon's now more than 70-day Internet cut-off in its Anglophone areas, leading to the creation of an "Internet refugee camp" in Bonako? Meanwhile French firms continue pursuing money under Paul Biya, including Sofema selling a patrol boat to Biya's navy, and Tessi ironically moving in the "digitization" market in Francophone Cameroon. The UN on March 28 answered others of Inner City Press' questions, but not the one about former UN legal adviser Felix Agbor Balla. The UN is being asked today again about Agbor Balla, and about the arrested lawyer Robert Fon, former President of Northwest Common Law Lawyers’ Association, arrested and transferred to Yaounde. On March 29 Inner City Press asked the UN: "Because UNanswered, asking again: In Cameroon, former UN legal adviser (in UNAMA and elsewhere) Felix Agbor Balla now, according to a UK-based barristers' organization, faces a military trial with the death penalty on the table for speaking out about conditions in the country's Anglophone areas, where the Internet has been cut for 71 days and counting. Particularly given Agbor-Balla's former position as a UN legal expert, what is not only the UN's comment, but what is the UN doing to attempt to ensure he receives due process? Also, what about the arrest of human rights lawyer Robert Fon and his transfer to Yaounde?" But while the UN responded to other questions from Inner City Press, nothing on this one. Nothing.
With former UN legal adviser Felix Agbor-Balla in Cameroon facing a military trial with the death penalty on the table, a UK-based legal group has written to Cameroonian president Paul Biya (here) while his former employer the UN has done... nothing. Inner City Press will be asking the UN yet again, while also seeking action and responses from others. With the UN's response to weeks of questions about repression and Internet cut off in Cameroon from Inner City Press being two ambiguous statements about the work of its Francois Lonseny Fall, on the morning of March 27 Inner City Press asked the UN's three top spokespeople: "In Cameroon, on which you've said the UN's Lonseny Fall is working, now the government has acted against TV station CRTV reporting on unrest in Western Cameroon. What is your comment, and what is Lonseny Fall or anyone else in the UN system doing about it? As asked before, what is the status of naming the next Resident Coordinator, and confirm if Najat Rochdi has begun at Deputy SRSG post in CAR." At the day's UN noon briefing, sans UN-restricted Inner City Press, spokesperson Farhan Haq faced only two questions. Afterward his Office sent Inner City Press this, which we publish in full: "Regarding the question you asked about Cameroon, the United Nations Regional Office for Central Africa (UNOCA), and the UN Country Team in Cameroon continue to follow events in the country. Concerning reports of the closure by the Government of a TV station in Western region of Cameroon, our colleagues are looking into the allegations. We remain concerned about reports of pressure being placed on press organs in Cameroon that are working on the situation in the Anglophone Regions, including reports of arrests and even alleged disappearance of journalists."
Cameroon Anglophone human rights defenders set for show trials on March 23 ran into a new trick: the government trying to join the cases of 25 more defendants with theirs. From collective punishment to collective trials. The ruling on that will now be on April 7. Tellingly, Voice of America's story didn't even mention the Internet cut-off for more than 60 days in Anglophone Cameroon, not that defendant Felix Agbor Balla was a UN legal adviser, for whom today's UN does nothing. VOA and the UN: birds of a feather.
While the UN first stonewalled then issued misleading statements about Cameroon, where the Internet has been cut off by the government in the Northwest and Southwest (Anglophone) regions for more than 60 days and counting, Inner City Press March 21, Inner City Press asked the UN's deputy spokesman Farhan Haq about the summons against Akere Muna, the lawyer for a former UN legal adviser, Nkongho Felix Agbor-Balla. UN's March 21 Transcript here and below. On March 22, Inner City Press asked the UN about the underlying detention of Agbor-Balla. Video here; UN transcript here:
Inner City Press: I wanted to ask you a Cameroon question. I'd asked you yesterday about this lawyer that's been summoned in, and there's growing outrage about that. But, actually, he's the lawyer for a person that used to be a UN legal adviser in UNAMA [United Nations Assistance Mission in Afghanistan] named Felix Agbor Balla. He's a lawyer that worked for the UN and now has been detained for months. Several US Congresspeople have, in fact, raised the issue. And I'm just wondering, one, particularly in the case of a former UN staff locked up seemingly without any type of due process, locked up only for advocacy, is there any UN role in these cases in actually looking into this individual case of a… of a former UN legal adviser now under detention in Yaoundé?
Deputy Spokesman: Well, we would certainly expect that due process is followed. We want to make sure that… especially that human rights defenders are not being prosecuted unfairly and those would be key concerns.
Agbor-Balla's continued detention has triggered protest from, as it happens, the US state of Indiana, where Congress members of both parties have spoken out: Democrat André Carson and Republican Jackie Walorski. But the UN, after two weeks of Press questions, offered only a statement by its Francois Lonseny Fall, largely covering up for the government of Paul Biya, in power for 32 years. What good is the UN? The question is becoming louder: watch this site.
Back on March 17, lead UN Spokesman Stephane Dujarric had returned with an answer: "in response to the situation in the Anglophone regions of Cameroon, the UN Special Representative of the Secretary-General and Head of the UN Regional Office for Central Africa (UNOCA), Mr. François Louncény Fall, carried out a number of visits to the country to discuss with the concerned parties the situation on the ground. His office has also carried out a number of working-level visits. Mr. Fall will continue efforts to engage with all relevant parties and to monitor the situation in close cooperation with the Office of the United Nations High Commissioner for Human Rights (OHCHR).We firmly believe that the grievances expressed by the Anglophone regions can only be addressed through an inclusive dialogue. In that regard, we note that, on 15 March, the President of Cameroon appointed the president and 13 representatives to the National Commission for the promotion of Bilingualism and Multiculturalism, the body tasked to engage in dialogue with the Anglophone community of Cameroon."
But "all relevant parties" does not appear to include France, whose UN Ambassador Francois Delattre told Inner City Press earlier on March 17 he was unaware of the issue.
In front of the UN Security Council on March 17 Inner City Press asked France's Ambassador to the UN Francois Delattre about his counterpart in Yaounde, Gilles Thibault, earlier this month congratulating 32-year President Paul Biya for how he's dealing with the areas. Delattre replied that he was unaware but would look into it. Video here.
Back on March 14 Inner City Press asked the US State Department: "Back on November 28, 2016, the Department issued a statement of 'concern[] over recent Cameroonian government actions to restrict free expression.' Since then, the government has cut off the Internet in the two regions, also known as the Anglophone areas, has arrested journalists and most schools remain closed. Is the US State Department concerned about these developments and if so, what if anything has it done about them?"
On March 15, a US State Department official answered Inner City Press: "We have discussed this issue with the Government of Cameroon both before and after our statement of concern. We don’t go into the details of our diplomatic conversations, but we engage regularly with the government on this and other issues as part of our normal bilateral relations." We hope to have more on this.
On March 9, Inner City Press asked both the International Monetary Fund and the UN Security Council's president about the crisis in Cameroon's Anglophone areas and heard that while the IMF acknowledges the financial risk, the Security Council does not see it as a threat to international peace and security. But the UN's Resident Coordinator Najat Rochdi has said nothing about the crisis, and blocks on Twitter the Press which asks about it. Is the UN system failing, in its new Secretary General's promise of increased preventative diplomacy?
When the IMF's spokesperson Gerry Rice took questions on March 9, Inner City Press asked about Cameroon, specifically the crackdown in the northwest and southwest of the country. Inner City Press asked, "On Cameroon, after the mission led by Corinne Delechat, what is the status of talks for a program, and since the IMF cited “civil unrest in the neighboring Central African Republic,” please state the IMF's awareness of civil unrest and arrests in Northwest and Southwest Cameroon, also known as the Anglophone areas, and their impact." Rice read out the question and then said, among other things, that the risk factors for 2017 include a continuation of the "social and political events" in the "so-called Anglophone" areas of Cameroon. Interim video here. On IMF site, here, from 34:56. IMF transcript below.
But a few hours later when Inner City Press asked the month's UN Security Council president Matthew Rycroft of the UK, who had just been in Cameroon, about the crisis, he said it is not a threat to international peace and security. From the UK transcript:
Inner City Press: In Cameroon there’s an issue that has been existing since November in Anglophone areas which have no internet for 52 days, there’s been teachers arrested, no schools. So I’m wondering as one Council member said, it did somehow come up in meetings, but was the issue raised at all, and what response was given by the government to this ongoing cut off of internet and abuse in this area?
Amb Rycroft: It came up informally in our contacts with members of the Government of Cameron but as far as I recall it did not come up in any formal meeting, and I think that makes sense because we were going there to look at the threat to international peace and security, and Boko Haram, and related issues, but in private, informal discussions with ministers in the Government of Cameroon it came up and they gave us the benefit of their perspective on the issue.
Inner City Press: Is there any Security Council role that can be played in trying to preventively deal with this issue?
Amb Rycroft: I don’t think it’s an issue on our agenda per se, we keep our eye on our radar across the world, but we have to make a judgement about whether something is a threat to international peace and security, and at the moment, I think our judgement would be that issue is an issue that is confined within Cameroon without international aspects.
But the UN Resident Coordinator does nothing about it, says nothing, blocks the Press.
We raise the question: how are UN Resident Coordinators selected? Inner City Press reported on Ban Ki-moon's son in law Siddharth Chatterjee getting multiple promotion under Ban, including being named UN Resident Coordinator in Kenya by Ban himself. (Inner City Press was evicted by Ban's UN, and remains restricted under Ban's successor). But shouldn't Anglophone Cameroonians have some input into the UN's next Resident Coordinator in their country? This is a project for the Free UN Coalition for Access, @FUNCA_info. Watch these sites and feeds.
From the IMF's March 9 transcript:
"There is a question of Cameroon, from Matthew Lee, "After the Mission what is the status of talks for a program; and since the IMF cited civil unrest in the neighboring Central African Republic, please state the IMF's awareness of civil unrest and arrests in Northwest and Southwest Cameroon? And also known as the Anglophone areas, and their impact?"
So, the background here is, I think important the context. So, the Fund's engagement here in the CEMAC Region, CEMAC is the six Central African Economic nations that comprise the Central African Economic and monetary community. They met in Yaoundé on December 23rd. The Managing Director was there. And in that meeting, heads of state discussed the economic situation, the severe shocks that have hit that CEMAC region in recent years, including the sharp decline in oil prices, and decided to act collectively and in a concerted manner. And the heads of state requested the assistance of the IMF to design economic reforms needed to reestablish macroeconomic stability in each country and in the region as a whole.
So, again, context: I can tell you that the funders already sent missions to Gabon, Republic of Congo. And a reminder to you, that we already have programs with Central African Republic and Chad. Okay?
Now, we also have sent a mission to Cameroon, which is the question. And we did issue a press statement, which the question referred to, just on Tuesday. That was the Corrine Delechat reference.
So, the specific question, to turn to that. We are indeed aware of the events in the so-called Anglophone regions of Cameroon. The macroeconomic impact of any event that could affect production and/or consumption, is typically felt with a certain lag. So, these events started in November last year, and thus are likely to have not had a significant impact on production in 2016.
For 2017, the risks to our growth outlook include a combination of external and domestic factors, including continuation of the sociopolitical events in the northwest and southwest regions of Cameroon. And as our press release the other day indicated, our view is that the medium-term outlook for the Cameroonian economy remains positive, subject to the implementation of appropriate policies."
Matthew Russell Lee
- Details
- Matthew Russell Lee
- Hits: 3390
To
The Clergy, Consecrated Men and Women and Christ's Lay Faithful,
Archdiocese of Bamenda
Rev. Monsignors, Rev. Fathers, Rev. Brothers and Rev. Sisters,
Dear brothers and sisters,
Christ has died, Christ is risen, Christ will come again!
It is with emotions of the certainty of the presence of the Risen Lord, but also of great concern that we write to you this Easter Morning.
First, we want to wish all of you the peace and joy of the Risen Lord. May our faith in the Risen Lord and the firm conviction of his presence in our midst be our consolation and our strength during this difficult period of the socio-political crisis in the Bamenda Ecclesiastical Province. Let us continue to trust in him and in the maternal protection of his Blessed Mother, 'Tor never was it known that anyone who fled to her protection, implored her help or sought her intercession was left unaided..
Secondly, we want to share with you a correspondence which we received on Wednesday of Holy Week, 12°' April 2017 because it is a cause of great concern for . all of us. It is a "Direct Summons" which has been served to us by a group of persons described as the "Consortium of Parents, whose children are in the various Mission Academic institutions". This so-called "Consortium" is acting through a certain Colonel TAMAMBANG and Lt. Colonel Terence SAMA, both of whom are unknown to us. We, your Bishops, together with the Principals of Sacred Heart College, Mankon, St. Bede's College, Ashing-Korn, Our Lady of Lourdes, College, Mankon, and Bishop George Nkuo of Kumbo Diocese and President of the Bamenda Provincial Episcopal Conference fBAPEC, are summoned to appear before the Court of First instance, Barnenda on 21. April 2017 at 9.00 a.m. to answer charges on seven counts which we hereby summarize:
1. We, the Bishops, have failed to ask parents to send their children back to school or to cause the deposit of school fees paid into an escrow account despite the notice served on 01/03/2017.
2. We signed a joint communique on 09/02/2017 in concertation with others to the effect that the non-resumption of schools is as a result of an unsolved political problem.
3. We have caused the non-payment of the salaries of teachers in Mission schools for some months now, thus depriving the state of the necessary tax deductions.
4. We have, for some months now, after collecting school fees, refused to teach, feed and accommodate students in schools.
5. We have refused to either teach their children or refund the school fees pursuant to the notice served on 01/03/2017.
6. We, the Bishops, signed a communique on 09/02/2017 which propagates false information liable to injure public authorities and national unity.
7. we, the Bishops, in the said communique of 09/02/2017 expressed our satisfaction on what we claim to be grievances or apprehensions as being evident, thus attempting to justify such grievances and apprehensions which are carried out against the security of the State.
The Consortium claims the amount of 150.000.000.000 (one hundred and fifty billion) francs CFA as special and general damages and pray the Court to convict and sentence us accordingly.
- Details
- Rita Akana
- Hits: 3209
It is said that a suicidal pessimist is a person who, of two evils, chooses both. Biya was slammed by the UN this week for violating the human rights of Anglophones. Jeune Afrique reported that the UN Secretary General, António Guterres, called Biya to have a chat on the Anglophone problem after a visit to Cameroon by the UN representative for the Central Africa region, Mr. Fall. Biya refused to take the call of the UN Secretary General. Unprecedented uncivilized behavior.
The events of this past week demonstrate that Paul Biya goes beyond the suicidal pessimist. When the Anglophone uprising began, Biya had two choices: take decisive steps to bring about change or ignore the cries of the people. Like the proverbial ostrich, he buried his head in the sand, declared that there was no Anglophone problem, and unleashed a reign of terror on Southern Cameroonians who were airing their grievances. On his orders, the Cameroonian military and police killed, raped, maimed, and arrested men, women and children. Biya detained the leaders of the Consortium. Biya cut off the Internet in Southern Cameroon, and headed off to relax and receive medical treatment in his first country, Switzerland.
While Biya's head was buried in the sand, the wind exposed his political nakedness. The Anglophone's have decisively won the war of communication against Biya and Issa Tchiroma. The Anglophone problem has gone global. Biya and his regime are roundly condemned around the world. The latest blow came from the United Nations, which slammed his dictatorial ways, and essentially ordered him to solve the problem whose existence he denies.
When violence and oppression did not shake the resolve of Anglophones, Biya chose the second evil: He decided to play the tortoise. He has curled up in his little French post-colonial shell, cowering in fear. He sent first his Minister of "Justice," Laurent Esso, and then the president (batonnier) of the Cameroon Bar Association, Ngnie Kamga, to play dirty tricks with some blatantly deceptive "reform decisions." The aim was to hoodwink the public, hoping that the Anglophone problem would go away, while the leaders of the Consortium languish in jail. Those deceptive efforts failed miserably.
The end result of Biya playing games with Cameroon is that the situation has become worse, and worsens by the day. As the mismanaged entity called "Cameroon" lurches toward a break-up, the ailing 84 year-old Biya is still tucked in his tortoise shell, doing nothing. Stubborn dictators never get it until it is too late. I fear we will soon reach a point of no return in this crisis. That is when La Republique du Cameroun returns to its borders of 1960.
- Details
- Mola EKO
- Hits: 2356
In a summon with seven counts handed to the defendants, the complainant is accusing the catholic clergy men of failing to ask parents to send their children to school despite collecting school fees from them, causing confusion and persistently refraining from performing duties which are to teach children which according to the State is an offence contrary to and punishable under section 151 of the Penal Code.
Bishops Cornelius Fontem ESUA, Bishop Michael, Bishop George NKOU after a meeting with others signed a release indicating that the non resumption of school was as a result of a non resolved political problem thereby committing an offence contrary to and punishable under section 157(a)of the Penal Code.
They are equally accused of causing the nonpayment of salaries of teachers in Mission schools for several months now an offence contrary to and punishable under section 183(2) of the Penal Code.
Other counts include release of Communiqué which propagated false information and puts national Unity in danger among others.
The Civil Claimant is therefore claiming the sum of 150.000.000 FCF5, One Hundred and Fifty Millions Francs CFA for special and general damages from the Catholic Church which is the employer of the accused.
They are expected to appear at the Bamenda Court of First Instance on April 21, 2017 by 9am.
The Catholic Church is yet to react to these allegations.
Camernews
- Details
- Rita Akana
- Hits: 3474
Subcategories
Biya Article Count: 73
# Paul Biya and his regime
Explore the political landscape of Cameroon under the rule of Paul Biya, the longest-serving president in Africa who has been in power since 1982. Our Paul Biya and his regime section examines the policies, actions, and controversies of his government, as well as the opposition movements, civil society groups, and international actors that challenge or support his leadership. You'll also find profiles, interviews, and opinions on the key figures and events that shape the political dynamics of Cameroon.
Southern Cameroons Article Count: 549
.# Southern Cameroons, Ambazonia
Learn more about the history, culture, and politics of Ambazonia, the Anglophone regions of Cameroon that have been seeking self-determination and independence from the Francophone-dominated central government. Our Southern Cameroons section covers the ongoing conflict, the humanitarian crisis, the human rights violations, and the peace efforts in the region. You'll also find stories that highlight the rich and diverse heritage, traditions, and aspirations of the Southern Cameroonian people.
Editorial Article Count: 885
# Opinion
Get insights and perspectives on the issues that matter to Cameroon and the world with our opinion section. We feature opinions from our editors, columnists, and guest writers, who share their views and analysis on various topics, such as politics, economy, culture, and society. Our opinion section also welcomes contributions from our readers, who can submit their own opinions and comments. Join the conversation and express your opinions with our opinion section.
