29, August 2019
IG’s Call to Social Citizenship Towards the Appeal Against the Nocturnal Trial and Life Sentences to President Sisiku AyukTabe and top Aides 0
Fellow Southern Cameroonians – Ambazonians,
The IG’s Call to Social Citizenship Towards the Appeal Against the Nocturnal Trial and Life Sentences to our President Sisiku Ayuk Tabe and his Close Aides
Accept Revolutionary Greetings from our Leadership in Detention (LIDs) who on black Tuesday the 20th of August went through a 19 hours Nocturnal Trial ending at 05h38 with illegal life sentences. This, despite the Nigeria Abuja High Court Judgement of the 1st of March 2019 that declared their abduction and transfer to Yaoundé illegal and by implication the trial and sentences. La Republique du Cameroun and its alias thought by given life sentences to our leaders, they will stifle our revolution. Unfortunately, it has rather re-engineered our struggle for total independence or resistance forever. We therefore owe a collective responsibility to
Comrades; President Sisiku Ayuk Tabe; Deacon Wilfred Tassang; Professor Augustine Awasum; Dr. Cornelius Kwanga; Dr. Henry Kimeng; Dr. Fidelis Ndeh-Che; Dr. Egbe Ogork; Barrister Shufai Berinyuy; Barrister Elias Eyambe, and Pa. Nfor Ngalla Nfor all of whom were handed life sentences by the Military Tribunal in Yaoundé to explore all available local remedies despite the lack of rule of law in La Republique du Cameroun.To this regard, today, the 29th of August 2019, our LIDs have just been notified with a Certificate of Appeal and other documents confirming their appeal against the verdict of their case at the Military Tribunal in Yaoundé, La Republique du Cameroun. This will require $10 000 in the next 10 days on or before the 7th of September 2019.
We know that there is no rule of law in La Republique du Cameroun and that we should not subject our leaders to their Kangaroo Nocturnal Courts. However, we need to evaluate the competing needs of our limited resources against the competitive advantages of (i) Keeping the LIDs in high morals that we have not abandoned them; (ii) explore all local remedies in an effort towards continental and international actions (iii) improved media exposure of our struggle; (iv) improved advocacy of our struggle; (v) international diplomacy value and (vi) uniting factor of the struggle. The above are just the top six competitive advantages amongst many other reasons why we as a people must rise up as One Ambazonia to raise the $10 000 just as we did in June 2019 for the legal case within the next seven days on or before the 6th of September to enable timely transmission. Payment options are available in annexure A of this release not as ransom from LRC but exhaustion of local legal remedies.
Justice for the Nera10 Leaders
Short Live the Revolution
God Bless the Federal Republic of Ambazonia
Yours in Servant Leadership
Dabney Yerima
Vice President – Federal Republic of Ambazonia
Annexure A to:
The IG’s Call to Social Citizenship Towards Appeal Against the Nocturnal Trial and Life Sentences to our President Sisiku AyukTabe and his Close Aides
To ensure total accountability and stewardship to our people, you are encouraged to use the following payment platforms into the IG-Care Treasury.
PAYMENT METHODS
(1) Paypal/Zelle: payment@ambagov.org.
(2) Cashapp #: 6462759595.
(3) Bank Transfer: Name of Account: Ambazonia Humanitarian Relief, Inc
Ref: Name – LID or Farmer
Checking
Act # 446043575486
Routing# 052001633
Savings
Act# 446043575473
Routing# 052001633
(4) South Africa:
AMBA SA BANKING DETAILS
Account name: SCACUF-SA
FNBAcc No – 62702089956
Branch code: 250655
Use your name and cellphone number as reference as well as “LIDs”.
(5) Germany & Euro payments
Paypal: pacgermany@sccgbayern.org
Justice for the Nera10 Leaders
Short Live the Revolution
God Bless the Federal Republic of Ambazonia
Yours in Servant Leadership
Dabney Yerima
Vice President
Federal Republic of Ambazonia
30, August 2019
Keep schools open, Cameroonian bishops tell Ambazonia Interim Gov’t 0
Some bishops in Cameroon have urged Anglophone separatists to allow schools to reopen, after militants abducted a bishop and two priests for condemning the school shutdown campaign.
“All children deserve the right to education and a good future wherever they decide to spend their lives,” said members of the Bamenda provincial bishops’ conference.
“Many parents have been consistently deceived about their children’s education, while arguments about a lack of security are used to frighten and prevent them sending [children] to school.”
The three-page open letter was published on August 24 after independence fighters in Cameroon’s northwest and southwest regions called for a new school shutdown.
The bishops said separatists had burned schools and killed teachers who had defied past boycott demands and should now “approach the issue of schools with reason more than emotion.”
However, the letter also called on the government to “exercise more vigilance” over military units and ensure they remained “as far from schools as possible.”
“Schools are not barracks, and [soldiers] should not enter them unless invited by competent authorities,” the bishops said.
“Every state has a right to employ its military to protect citizens and defend its territorial integrity. However, it is also known that some military have used exaggerated force against innocent civilians and sometimes committed horrendous crimes against children,” they said.
The letter was published as Bishop George Nkuo of Kumbo was freed by abductors on August 24, five days after two of his priests were released by separatists.
Journal du Cameroun said all three had been detained in apparent retaliation for an August 15 homily by Bishop Nkuo, who condemned the school closures as a “crime against humanity and a great exploitation.” He called on Catholics to resist “the evil dragon of violence, torture and kidnappings.”
Separatist leader Mark Bareta denied the bishop had been kidnapped and told the same newspaper Aug. 26 his fighters were “civilians and Christians,” and had sought “a conversation with their bishop.”
At least 2,000 people have been killed and 400,000 displaced during three years of army deployment in the Anglophone regions, where separatists declared an independent state, Ambazonia, in October 2017 after protesting the encroachment of French-language controls.
Church leaders and human rights groups have condemned atrocities by both sides in the territories.
Other senior Catholic clergy have also been abducted, including Archbishop Cornelius Esua of Bamenda, who was detained briefly in June after attempting to pass a separatist roadblock.
In an Aug. 27 statement, Unicef estimated 4,400 schools had been closed and 74 burned, leaving more than 600,000 children without education in northwest and southwest Cameroon. Journal du Cameroun said a “mass exodus” was now underway to avoid the separatist shutdown.
Source: Catholic Herald