Yaounde Military Tribunal ruling confirms government isn’t ready for talks
A Cameroon military tribunal handed life sentences to 10 men who led a secessionist movement in the country’s two English-speaking regions until their arrest in neighboring Nigeria last year.
A full-blown rebellion in the two regions has since resulted in hundreds of deaths, the closing of most primary and secondary schools and the near-collapse of the local economy. Cameroon’s top state-owned agribusiness company said last month the crisis has had a “disastrous” effect on its operations, cutting output of palm-oil and rubber and leaving most of its banana plantations destroyed.
President Paul Biya, who’s been in power for almost four decades, has repeatedly vowed to quash the separatist rebels. The Communications Ministry said on Twitter it has “taken note” of the military tribunal’s ruling.
“This is nothing less or more than a deliberate attempt by the Yaounde regime to bring about the total deterioration of the situation in the Northwest and Southwest regions, which for nearly three years have paid the heaviest price in this crisis,” Maximilienne Ngo Mbe, head of the Network for Human Rights Defenders in Central Africa, told reporters Tuesday.
The only country in Africa with both English and French as official languages, Cameroon was split after World War I into a French-run zone and a smaller British-controlled area. They were unified in 1961, but the English-speaking minority, about a fifth of the population, has complained of marginalization for decades.
Source: Bloomberg