19, May 2021
Southern Cameroons Interim Gov’t issues statement on the plot to bomb Fiango Market 0
A Plot to Bomb Fiango Market by French Cameroun Military Personnel
Following a thorough investigation and brave intelligence work of the Ambazonia Intelligence Services, The Interim Government of Ambazonia is by this statement informing the International Community and the people of Ambazonia that;
1. An attempt to bomb Fiango Market in Kumba, Southern Cameroons, by forces loyal to the regime in Yaoundé was thwarted on Thursday, 13 May 2021. The plot was another attempt to kill innocent people, destroy property, and then deceitfully ascribe the crime to our brave self-defense forces.
2. Mr Biya’s tribal Bulu militia, infected by HIV/AIDs and other sexually transmittable diseases, continue to pursue the genocidal agenda of the regime in Yaoundé through widespread rape and infection of Ambazonian women. Mr Biya aims, therefore, to continue the destruction of the people of Ambazonia with complete impunity.
3. Today, the world is informed that forty-nine schoolchildren of Mendankwe Government Secondary High School have been impregnated and infected with HIV by Biya’s Bulu militia.
4. We, the people of Southern Cameroons, reserve the right to defend ourselves. However, as a people, we remain committed to peace and are prepared to engage with the regime in Yaoundé to find a peaceful solution to the conflict between our two nations.
We continue to call for the withdrawal of Mr Biya’s rapist and genocide-perpetrating colonial occupation forces. The Interim Government of Ambazonia calls for the release of all Ambazonians that Mr Biya’s regime has taken hostage. We call on a UN Mandated International Fact-finding Mission to Ambazonia to ascertain and record atrocities committed upon our people. Only such a mission will bring all perpetrators to justice.
All Southern Cameroonians in Ground Zero must remain vigilant for acts of vandalism and blackmail by La Republique du Cameroun military. We must not be intimidated, and our focus must remain on the prize of freedom and independence.
Sincerely,
Dabney Yerima
19, May 2021
French Cameroun: journalist Paul Chouta sentenced and fined in defamation case 0
Journalist Paul Chouta has been sentenced to 23 months’ imprisonment and ordered to pay several million CFA francs in fines and damages after being held for two years awaiting a trial verdict in Cameroon. Reporters Without Borders (RSF) deplores this excessive and unjustified penalty which is a serious attack on press freedom.
The judge’s verdict was finally issued yesterday after being postponed 27 times. Paul Chouta, a reporter for the Cameroun Web media outlet and a whistleblower critical of the government, was the subject of a complaint brought by the novelist Calixthe Belaya alleging defamation and the publication of fake news.
The judge sentenced him to 23 months in prison and ordered him to pay a fine of 160,000 CFA francs and a further 2 million CFA francs in damages (a total of some 3,200 euros).
He was alleged to have posted online a video of her in a heated argument with a man without seeking her permission. The video lasted just a few minutes and as a result he was held for two years in pre-trial detention, the maximum sentence for the charges against him.
The time he has already served in prison is more than the sentence but he must still raise the funds to pay the financial penalties to secure his release from Yaoundé’s main jail, normally reserved for the most serious offenders.
“Not only has Paul Chouta had to face court proceedings and a long period of detention, but he must now pay an exorbitant sum to be able finally to leave prison,” said RSF. “The verdict is the culmination of a farcical case. There is no justification for such a long detention and final verdict unless it is an attempt to silence a troublesome voice. We call on Cameroon’s justice authorities to take firm action to protect freedom of news and information and to ensure that journalists have the right to fair treatment by the judicial system in the country.”
Before his detention the journalist had been the target of threats over stories that were critical of the government. In January 2019, a few months after his arrest, he was the target of a knife attack by three unidentified assailants. After his arrest, several of his close associates were also subjected to repeated intimidation attempts by the police.
Several journalists are in prison in Cameroon, where press freedom has been eroded in recent years. Amadou Vamoulké, 71, the former head of the state-owned national radio and TV broadcaster CRTV, has been held for almost five years in Kondengui prison in Yaoundé awaiting trial. The journalist Emmanuel Mbombog Mbog Matip was arrested and arbitrarily detained in August 2020 accused of publishing fake news. He has announced he will start a hunger strike from tomorrow.
Cameroon is ranked 135th out of 180 countries in the 2021 World Press Freedom Index compiled by RSF.
Source: RSF