Samedi 17 Mai 2008

actualité








Actualité

Cameroon: Soldiers killed by gunmen

Atonbong West, Bakassi 21 Cameroonian soldiers have reportedly been killed by men suspected to be Niger Delta militants, in the Bakassi peninsula, a territory won from Nigéria in 2002.

Cameroun-online/ Wednesday 14 Nov

Some 21 Cameroonian soldiers were reportedly killed on 13 November by men in military uniforms in the Bakassi peninsula, a territory won from Nigéria in the International Court of Justice in 2002.

A Nigéria analyst told IRIN that suspicion was focussing on militants from the nearby Niger Delta but observers also say locals may be involved.

In a recent visit to the peninsular many locals expressed a strong antipathy to Cameroonian rule. Most interviewed preferred to be under Nigérian sovereignty. Some said they would fight to be free from Cameroon.

Halfway through a two-year process of transferring the long-disputed region from Nigéria to Cameroon, there are three areas of Bakassi, each with its own issues. In all three areas, residents told IRIN of their anger and frustration with a transition process that began in August 2006 marked by the formal pullout of Nigérian civilian and military elements.

In that period, living conditions, residents and officials say, have deteriorated in at least two of the three areas. The number of people living on the peninsular is wildly disputed, from as few as 10,000 to as many as a million. Part of the difficulty is that much of the population is mobile and depends on fishing.

Following years of tensions between Nigéria and Cameroon which led to clashes in the 1990s, Nigéria officially accepted a 2002 decision by the International Court of Justice which awarded all of the swampy peninsula to Cameroon.

Diplomatically, the process has been touted as a huge success. Nigéria had administered the peninsula since independence from Britain in 1960, except during occasional incursions by Cameroon. The withdrawal followed a series of border agreements between the two countries covering the 2,300 km land border, from Lake Chad and to the Gulf of Guinea - where the two countries plan to share significant offshore oil reserves.

According to UN officials who are members of the Cameroon-Nigéria Mixed Commission helping to monitor the agreement, Bakassians have three choices: They can take full Cameroonian citizenship, they can remain Nigérian and take resident alien status in Cameroon, or they can leave Bakassi and resettle in Nigéria.

The Bakassi Zone

The social and humanitarian situation on the peninsula has become precarious, particularly on the tiny southern tip of the peninsula officially known as the 'Bakassi Zone' which Nigéria will control until June 2008.

The zone is the most heavily populated and overcrowded part of the peninsula because fishermen there are close to good fishing areas.

However, schools, health services and clean water have largely stopped working and efforts to stop beach erosion are failing with hundreds of houses collapsing into the sea each year.

Bakassi under Cameroon

The rest of the peninsula north of the Bakassi Zone, is under Cameroonian control and the authorities have started providing services there such as water supply, schools and health services. IRIN saw a new, well-equipped hospital in village of Akwa (formerly known as Achibong under Nigérian rule). However, some local people said they were not using it. They told IRIN they didn't want Cameroonian services because they didn't accept Cameroonian rule.

The Cameroonian sub-prefect of Akwa, Fonya Felix Morfan, told IRIN "many of the people here see us as colonisers". He said law and order was breaking down because Cameroonian police and gendarmes are not in place. "Public buildings are being vandalized and people are smoking marijuana right in front of me. They blow the smoke in my face."

New Bakassi

The third Bakassi is not even on the Bakassi peninsula and is currently more an idea than a reality. Some 30 kilometres away inside Nigéria the new Bakassi local government area was recently carved out of Akpabuyo local government area.

It was created by the Nigérian government as a refuge for people on the peninsula who did not wish to live under Cameroonian rule. Yet despite assurances of investment from the federal government to invest some one billion naira (US$8.3 million) in the new Bakassi, the area still cannot even be accessed by road. There are no schools or health services there and inadequate access to clean water, local sources say.

Only a few hundred people live there now and no recently-built structures can be seen. About half the people IRIN talked with said they had lived there for all their lives. The other half said they had come from the Bakassi peninsula and simply moved in with relatives already living in "New Bakassi".

On the peninsula many people IRIN talked with said they wanted to leave and go to New Bakassi as soon as there was something there to go to. But with the current lack of basic infrastructure, a sudden influx of people from the peninsula could lead to a crisis.

Réagir à cet article | Imprimer | Envoyer cet article à


Réaction de associates citi
Le 2007-12-14 00:11:26

Good Day! My son is a student. We are going to apply for student credit card online to allow him building credit history. It will be for the first time. I have 3 credit cards but had gotten them at the banks. Could you help me whether this site is reliable or not? discover purchases balance transfers 2010




Nous vous recommandons de réagir dans le strict respect des conditions d’utilisation de ce site. «Ma liberté s’arrête là où commence celle d’autrui ». Les posts diffamatoires, injurieux, etc. seront automatiquement supprimés.


Vous pouvez réagir à cet article en laissant un bref
message qui sera ensuite affiché sous l'article :



Votre nom  

Nombre de caractères restant :

Associer une icône




Groupe Cameroun-Online - Régie publicitaire - Contact - Conditions d'utilisation

© Twmicronics.com 2006 - Tous droits réservés