28, January 2018
Arrest of Sisiku Ayuk Tabe made armed resistance against La Republique more popular 0
A survey carried out by Cameroon Concord News Group shows that Southern Cameroonians now favour armed struggle against Cameroon government forces more than they did before the arrest of the President of the Federal Republic of Ambazonia Sisiku Ayuk Tabe and 10 of his top aides in Abuja, Nigeria.
The survey’s results are a reflection of the opinions of Southern Cameroonian in the Meme, Menchum, Manyu, Fako, Bui and Mezam States as well as Ambazonians living in French Cameroun precisely in Yaoundé and Douala.
The study was conducted soon after the Nigerian Foreign Minister announced that the President Buhari administration had arrested the Ambazonian Interim Head of State following an operation staged by the DSS in Abuja.
According to Southern Cameroonians who participated in the poll, 76.5 percent picked the armed confrontation option, and only 10.2 percent chose the dialogue option. The same study found that support for the Southern Cameroons uprising is growing deep within Anglophone militants of the ruling CPDM.
The entire Southern Cameroons territory is currently under the control of the Francophone dominated armed forces, while the Biya regime is claiming to have initiated dialogue with English speaking Cameroonians.
The arrest of the Ambazonian leaders in Abuja sparked angry and, on occasions, deadly attacks against French Cameroun forceS.
By Rita Akana in Yaoundé
28, January 2018
Fresh attack kills 4 soldiers in Mali 0
Militants have launched a fresh attack on military personnel in Mali’s lawless northern desert region, killing four soldiers.
A statement by the armed forces posted on social media on Sunday said the attack that took place earlier in the day in Menaka targeted soldiers and national guard members.
It said the attacker was “destroyed” as he was trying to detonate his explosives near the army and guard post.
“Unfortunately during this operation, four armed forces personnel lost their lives,” the statement added.
Other military sources denied reports that more than one person were behind the attack, adding that the armed forces were now “in control of the situation”.
Military helicopters operated by France, the most dominant foreign force in Mali, were hovering above the area, the sources said.
The attack was the second to rock Mali’s troubled north in the weekend. On Saturday, militants blitzed the Soumpi military camp, took control of it and killed 14 soldiers. Another 18 were wounded in the attack which came near Timbuktu, about 800 kilometers (500 miles) east of Menaka.
France, the former colonizing power in Mali, led a massive military operation in early 2013 to push back militants linked to al-Qaeda from the desert region. However, attacks have continued unabated on domestic and foreign forces since then while civilians living in central Mali have also been affected. A total of 26 people, including women and infants, were killed Thursday after their vehicle drove over a landmine in Boni, located outside of the desert region.
President Ibrahim Boubacar Keita deplored the attack which left a high civilian death toll. “All of Mali was in mourning, all of Mali is appalled,” said Keita while visiting the region instead of attending a planned regional summit.
Source: Presstv