25, April 2017
Camair-Co tug-of-war: Biya Beti Ewondo gang in control 0
President Biya has finally joined forces with his kinsman, Edgar Alain Mebe Ngo’o the Minister of Transport and gotten rid of the Chairman of the Board of Directors of Camair-Co Mefiro Oumarou. The emergency Camair-Co board meeting yesterday in Yaounde recorded a dramatic and an incredible turnaround situation.
State radio and television including other independent media sources announced the sacking of the general manager, Ernest Dikoum and later on information was made public that he was retained by members who attended the Hilton Hotel forum in Yaoundé. The Biya Beti Ewondo surprise came where it was least expected.
Mefiro Oumarou, the Chairman of the Board of Directors, was disembarked only eight months after his appointment and was replaced by Louis Georges Njipendi. The latter appointed by presidential decree, was immediately installed by Edgar Alain Mebe Ngo’o, Minister of Transport. Thus, in the quarrel between the former Board Chairman and the Minister of Transport over the management of the recovery plan of Camair-co, Paul Biya decided in favor of the Minister Edgar Alain Mebe Ngo’o.
By Chi Prudence Asong
25, April 2017
Yaounde Military Tribunal sentences RFI correspondent to 10 years in prison 0
The military court in Yaoundé has sentenced to ten (10) years in prison, the Radio France International Hausa language correspondent in Cameroon. Ahmed Abba, a correspondent for the Africa section of the French State’s international radio media was also ordered to pay the sum of 55 million FCFA by the Yaoundé military court.
The Biya Francophone regime claimed to have arrested him at the end of July 2015 in possession of several identity cards, Ahmed Abba was prosecuted for “complicity in terrorist acts and not for terrorist acts” in a trial, which opened in February 2016, lasted more than a year.
The state prosecutor introduced Ahmed Abba as an accomplice of the Nigerian Islamic sect, Boko Haram in Cameroonian territory. These accusations have always been rejected by our colleague whose employer RFI, via a communiqué sent its dismayed over the court decision.
By Eyong Johnson