20, February 2017
CPDM news portal announces the creation of English-language schools by Bamileke billionaires 3
A report published by the pro Biya regime online portal, Cameroun Info.Net has revealed that Bamileke billionaires plan to build English-language schools in the Western region. Cameroun Info.Net did not make public the names of the Bamileke tycoons but was quick to state that if the project succeeds it would be a great economic and cultural loss for the region of the Northwest, generally considered the base of Anglo-Saxon education in Cameroon.
Ever since the strike action orchestrated by the Cameroon Anglophone Civil Society Consortium, schools and colleges in Southern Cameroons have remain closed and ghost town operations have rocked the entire West Cameroon territory. The parents of Francophone students are now demanding reimbursement of their children’s school fees from both the Roman Catholic and Protestant academic establishments.
Reacting to the news of the Bamileke billionaires, our senior political commentator observed that it is simply an attempt by the Biya Francophone regime to put the Bamilekes and Southern Cameroonians are daggers-drawn positions.
By Rita Akana
21, February 2017
Six killed in Guinea amid violent rally against teachers’ strike 0
At least six Guineans have been killed during violent protest rallies calling for the reopening of schools amid a weeks-long strike by teachers. The government said in a statement that the protests, which rocked various neighborhoods of the Guinean capital of Conakry on Monday, also left at least 30 people injured, including members of the police force.
“Our capital was the scene of unauthorized and illegal protests” to call for the reopening of schools, the government said. Government centers, small stores and gas stations remained closed Monday amid fears that there would be looting by the protesters, mostly young students.
Teachers’ unions in the West African country have been on strike since February 1 to demand a pay raise and better working conditions as well as the full integration of contracted teachers, who are not full time, in the public school system. During the Monday rallies, the protesting students shouted, “Where will we go to class? There is no activity in the country.”
The demonstrators also set fire to tires and threw them into the streets, prompting police to respond by firing tear gas.The Guinean authorities arrested at least 12 people on Monday. According to a hospital source, four men, including two young people, and one woman were shot dead during the clashes. Another young man was hit by a bus as he attempted to flee the violence, a police official said.
The government said the demonstrations turned violent despite a deal reached “with the unions after many days of negotiations” on Sunday night. However, the unions said Monday that the strike would continue until their demand for a pay raise of between 7.5 and 10.3 percent is met. “We will continue to strike, and we then also demand the resumption of courses by licensed educated contractors,” union spokesman Aboubacar Soumah said.
Presstv