3, December 2016
Exposed: How Minister Laurent Esso is francophonizing the Anglophone legal system 3
This is how Minister Laurent Esso has been slowly but surely eliminating the Anglophone legal system and our Common law values and he was quick to say we have to stay in a “united” Cameroon where he Esso can jail a former Anglophone Prime Minister and Head of Government and nothing happens.
Francophone dominance in the legal department in the South West region
Of the 148 Magistrates in the South West- 58 are francophone
Of the 89 Magistrates in the legal bench in the Southwest region, 54 of them are francophone
Of the 50 Magistrates serving in Buea (Bench & Legal Department) – 20 are francophone
28 Magistrates in the legal division and 20 of them are francophone.
30 new bailiffs were appointed in January 2014 and 28 of them are francophone.
Francophone domination in the legal department in the North West region
There are 128 Magistrates in the Northwest and 67 are francophone with no mastery of the English language.
There 97 Magistrates of the Legal Bench and 64 of them are francophone
There are 45 Magistrates serving in Bamenda metropolis and 22 of them are francophone
27 Magistrates in the divisions and 21 of them are francophone.
21 new bailiffs were appointed in January 2014 and all of them were francophone.
Comparing the appointments of Magistrates in a bilingual Cameroon:
There are 119 Magistrates in the Courts in Douala metropolis and only 2 of them are Anglophones
There are 107 Magistrates in the Courts in Yaoundé and only 2 of them are Anglophones
49% of Magistrates in Bamenda and 40 % of Magistrates in Buea the Anglophone regional headquarters are Francophone.
Why are more Francophones sent to our key jurisdictions and only an insignificant number of Anglophones sent to the francophone key jurisdictions?
If at all there is blending of both systems:
Why are our Anglophone Magistrates only good for Tcholire, Ambam, Poli, Ntui, Kousseri, Yokadouma, Batouri,Tignere and not considered good for Yaoundé and Douala?
Why is it that almost all the newly appointed bailiffs in Anglophone Cameroon are civil Law trained jurists?
Do you think the envisaged appointment of Notaires will depart from this train if any ?
Why is the Language of the military only French in a Bilingual Country?
Why is French the Language of the Military Courts in a Bilingual Country?
3, December 2016
CPDM government reacts to US State Department human rights allegations 0
The so-called Cameroonian government spokesman and Minister of Communication, Issa Tchiroma Bakary has reacted to allegations made by the US State Department which accused Yaoundé of “various violations of fundamental freedoms in Cameroon”, specifically in the management of the demonstrations in Bamenda and in Buea deep within the English-speaking part of the country .
Minister Tchiroma observed that the police acted in strict respect for the international commitments that bind Cameroon. The corrupt government official added that “The government has sought to maintain dialogue and consultation with a view to finding appropriate solutions to the demands of Anglophone lawyers and English-speaking teachers.”
In this regard, Tchiroma said, appropriate measures had been taken, namely: – the working visit to Bamenda by the Prime Minister, Head of Government, from the 25th to the 27th of November 2016, to discuss with representatives of lawyers and teachers; – the creation by the Prime Minister, Head of Government of an inter-ministerial committee to examine the problems of teachers.
The controversial politician chanted the same old CPDM slogans no longer listened too in British Southern Cameroons and enlisted “the opening of sectoral negotiations, to the respective diligence of the Minister of Justice, on the one hand, and the Minister of Higher Education on the other as positive steps taken by the Francophone government.”
Issa Tchiroma also noted that the special donation of 2 billion FCFA to private sector teachers, the announced recruitment of 1000 young bilingual teachers and even the creation of an ad hoc committee, are signs of openness to dialogue. It is of vital importance to include in this report that Minister Issa Tchiroma was addressing the wrong audience and that the Anglophone leaders have rejected all government proposals not linked to a new constitution for the country that will guarantee Anglophone autonomy.
By Rita Akana