5, July 2023
Southern Cameroonians cannot fight off French Cameroun except through use of force 0
The Ambazonia Interim Government has asserted that the people of Southern Cameroons could achieve their goals against La Republique du Cameroun only through the use of force, as the regime continues its unabated onslaught on nearly all the rural areas in the entire Southern Cameroons territory.
Professor Carlson Anyangwe told Cameroon Intelligence Report late on Tuesday that all in the Southern Cameroons diaspora should be ready to help Ground Zero win over La Republique du Cameroun regime through use of force.
The renowned Southern Cameroons academic who also moonlights as a key figure in the Southern Cameroons Interim Government told our chief political man Soter Tarh Agbaw-Ebai that based on assessment by the department of foreign affairs that was put in place by the jailed President Sisiku Ayuk Tabe, the people of the Federal Republic of Ambazonia cannot regain their seized rights from the French Cameroun regime in Yaoundé through negotiation.
“Therefore, all Southern Cameroonians in the diaspora should get involved in the liberation process and support any request for assistance from the Vice President of the Ambazonia Interim Government Dabney Yerima,” Professor Anyangwe added.
The Cameroon government military and its proxies have assaulted several villages in Southern Cameroons.
However, in a new report titled “With or Against Us. The population caught between the army, armed separatists and militias in the English-speaking North-West region”, Amnesty International lists “extrajudicial executions”, “torture”, “rape and other sexual violence” perpetrated by both sides. The report is based on the testimony of “more than 100 victims “leaders of local NGOs and journalists.
By Asu Isong
London Bureau Chief
Cameroon Concord News Group
5, July 2023
Southern Cameroons Crisis: Amnesty International says ‘Atrocities’ committed by all sides 0
Security forces, separatist rebels and ethnic militiamen have committed “atrocities” in a troubled region in Cameroon, including executions, torture and rape, Amnesty International said on Tuesday.
Its report found new evidence of abuses in the country’s Northwest Region – one of two western regions where anglophone militants declared independence from the majority francophone state in 2017.
Their declaration, which has never been recognised internationally, triggered a crackdown by the government in Yaounde.
The new investigation sheds light on militias in the Northwest Region that are drawn from the Mbororo community — Fulani herders with a long history of conflict with sedentary farmers.
Civilians are “caught between the army, armed separatists and militias,” the report says.
“The Mbororo Fulani populations have been quickly targeted by armed separatists, in part because they are perceived as supporting the authorities in power,” it says.
“As the situation deteriorated, militias mainly composed of Mbororo Fulani, supported or tolerated by the authorities, have committed abuses against the population.”
The report also documents what it says are killings, rape and property destruction by the defence and security forces themselves.
“The government has announced the opening of investigations on human rights violations committed by armed forces’ elements,” it notes.
“However, for many cases, there has been no further information release, raising impunity concerns.
“Moreover, the authorities are attempting to silence human rights defenders, activists, lawyers, and the media speaking out against atrocities. Armed separatists also threaten those exposing their crimes.”
The group said it was concerned that Cameroon’s partners — including Belgium, Britain, Croatia, France, Israel, Russia and Serbia — were continuing to supply arms “which highly risk” being used by the various groups to commit crimes.
The conflict in the Northwest and neighbouring Southwest regions has claimed around 6,000 lives and forced more than a million from their homes, according to an estimate by the International Crisis Group (ICG) think tank.
Amnesty said the report was based on two missions in November 2022 and March 2023 in which its investigators spoke to more than 100 victims of crimes as well as journalists and human rights activists.
Requests to meet government ministers did not receive a reply, it said.
Source: AFP