16, July 2023
French Cameroun: Boko Haram demand ransom to release abducted villagers 0
Members of the Islamic State West Africa Province (ISWAP), a splinter group of the Boko Haram terror group, have demanded $16, 750 (USD) from 13 people kidnapped during an attack at Goré Kendi village in Cameroon.
The victims, whose community is located at the municipality of Blangoua in the department of Logone-et-Chari which borders Lake Chad, have been held captive by the terror group since June 30.
Locals said that aside from kidnapping the residents, they also made away with their properties.
The attack was carried out simultaneously with another attack orchestrated by Boko Haram’s Jama’atu Ahlussunnah Liddaawati Wal Jihad (JAS) militants in the same division.
While two persons were killed in the Waza, Logone and Chari division the same night, others sustained injuries.
The Far North of Cameroon is a land that lies between Nigeria to the west and Chad to the east. Jihadists operate in the region, waging attacks against villages connecting the three countries.
Until 2015, Boko Haram, which has been carrying out attacks in the Far North of Cameroon, pledged allegiance to ISWAP.
However, ISWAP killed a defiant Boko Haram leader in 2021, establishing control over the Lake Chad basin, while relegating some Boko Haram members to remote areas.
A report from the United Nations office for the Coordination of Humanitarian Affairs (OCHA), says there have been an increased number of attacks from non-state armed groups in the country as almost 10,000 people have flee their homes between January and May 2023.
Meanwhile, some villages have created vigilante groups to repel attacks from terrorists. Also, the United Nations Development Programme has recently offered bicycles, megaphones and first aid kits to members of vigilanté groups to reduce terror attacks.
Source: Humangle
17, July 2023
Southern Cameroons Crisis: Gunmen kill 10 in Bamenda 0
Gunmen killed 10 people and injured two others at a busy junction in the city of Bamenda in Cameroon’s troubled northwest, the regional governor said on Monday.
A witness said the attackers arrived in vehicles late on Sunday, ordered people onto the floor with accusations of failing to back local separatists, and opened fire as some obeyed while others ran.
The Ambazonia Defence Forces (ADF), one of the main separatist groups in the English-speaking region which has been fighting since 2017 in protest of alleged marginalisation by the majority French-speaking government, denied responsibility.
North West region governor Adolphe Lele Lafrique told the Reuters news agencty a manhunt had been launched for the “terrorists” behind the massacre. “Investigations are on, and we will issue a statement on this later today,” he added.
The witness said men in military uniforms arrived in two vehicles to storm Nacho Junction, where restaurants, bars and shops are located, at around 7:30pm (18:30 GMT).
They shot at people indiscriminately, the witness said, before taking off.
“There is [the] possibility that it could be revenge killing,” ADF spokesperson Lucas Asu said, suggesting the attackers could have been disguised as separatist fighters.
Discrepancies between the French and English academic, legal and administrative systems which have always existed concurrently, as well as cries of political and economic marginalisation, crystallised into a series of protests and riots in 2016.
The violent suppression of those protests has led to a full-blown conflict that has resulted in the deaths of more than 6,000 people in Anglophone Cameroon since.
Earlier this month, human rights group Amnesty International slammed government troops, militias and separatists for killings, rapes, torture, and burning of houses among other atrocities in Cameroon’s English-speaking regions.
It said those who speak out were being threatened and detained.
SOURCE: REUTERS