Cameroon’s Separatists Intensify Attacks to Protest Dialogue

Cameroon’s Separatists Intensify Attacks to Protest Dialogue

New violence has flared in Cameroon as preparations intensify for a national dialogue called by President Paul Biya to end the conflict that has killed at least 2,000 people in the country’s English-speaking regions.  Scores of people have been killed in recent days and electricity has been cut, mostly in English-speaking towns, when attackers set fire to power distribution equipment.  The military has been deployed to replace teachers who are, once again, escaped to safer places, VOA news reports.

Forty-five-year-old Godfred Metuge heeded the call of the Cameroon government to return and teach in the English-speaking southwestern town of Mamfe when the school year in the central African nation began  September 2. Metuge has again fled for his life to Cameroon’s capital, Yaounde.

“It is because of the insecurity there. I was traumatized,” he said. “My children were traumatized and there are many people who had from the trauma, they went to serious depressions and from serious depressions, some even passed on.”

FILE - President of Cameroon Paul Biya with Chinese President Xi Jinping (not pictured) attend a signing ceremony at The Great Hall Of The People in Beijing, China, March 22, 2018.
FILE – President of Cameroon Paul Biya with Chinese President Xi Jinping (not pictured) attend a signing ceremony at The Great Hall Of The People in Beijing, China, March 22, 2018.

Metuge said violent attacks by separatist fighters intensified when Cameroon’s president, Paul Biya, on September 10 announced that he was convening a national dialogue to solve the crisis in the English-speaking regions, but did not release separatist leader Ayuk Tabe and his 10 collaborators who have life prison sentences by a military tribunal in Yaounde.

47-year-old trader Etienne Mbaku, who has also fled from the English-speaking northwestern town of Ndop, says he thinks that the violence seen since September 10 when Biya called for the national dialogue will stop if the president frees separatist leaders.

“What I think should be added before the dialogue is, he should personally grant a general amnesty to the detainees to calm down people who are angry so that they should participate in the dialogue,” he said.

Children on the streets asking for education and to be spared from the separatist war, Aug. 31, 2019, in Bamenda, Cameroon. ( Moki Kindzeka/VOA )
FILE – Children on the streets asking for education and to be spared from the separatist war, Aug. 31, 2019, in Bamenda, Cameroon. (Moki Kindzeka/VOA)

The military reports gun battles have intensified in the English-speaking northwestern towns of Kumbo, Ndop, Bamenda, Bafut, Kom, Mbengwi, Bambui and the south western towns of Buea, Kumba, Mamfe, Eyumujock and Mutengene. The new violence has left about 25 dead in the past two weeks.

The electricity supply has been interrupted in many northwestern towns after separatist fighters pulled down and burned high tension cables and electricity equipment. They also destroyed nine schools and blocked several roads into the English-speaking regions and blew up tankers transporting fuel to English-speaking towns.

The military said it had deployed troops to protect civilians and their property.

Colonel Sone Joseph Ajang, director of administrative and regulatory affairs in Cameroon’s ministry of defense says they have deployed teachers who are also military personnel to schools hardest hit by the violence.

“Their role is to teach and to ensure that security in the school vicinity is guaranteed,” he said. “We want to make a shift by giving firm instructions to the head teachers to ensure that they bring the attention of the hierarchy to absentee teachers who are military personnel because teaching staff who are absent compromise the future of our children whom they have under their duty to ensure that education is dispatched to them.”

The governor of Cameroon's southwest region, Bernard Okalia Bilai, speaks to a trader while touring a burned down market in Limbe, Cameroon, April 3, 2017.
FILE – The governor of Cameroon’s southwest region, Bernard Okalia Bilai, speaks to a trader while touring a burned down market in Limbe, Cameroon, April 3, 2017.

Bernard Okalia Bilai, governor of Cameroons English-speaking southwest region says fighters should drop their guns and have confidence that the dialogue will address issues they have been raising.

“I am appealing [to the fighters] to drop all their arms,” he said. “Our children are not going to school for three years. Please, can those who are preventing children stop. Can those who are destroying the economy because they wanted the dialogue stop so that we go to dialogue now and come back with peace.”

As the violence continues, Cameroon’s prime minister, Dion Ngute, has been consulting with political party leaders, civil society activists, opinion leaders, traditional rulers, lawmakers and clergy to gather their proposals, which will be submitted for examination during the national dialogue announced from September 30 to October 4 in Yaounde with the aim of achieving a definitive return to peace.

Civil society groups and opposition political parties are calling for the unconditional release of Anglophone separatist leaders and other political prisoners before discussions begin.

Separatist groups have, on social media, called the dialogue a non-event. They say they became a sovereign state called Ambazonia on October 1, 2017 when  Ayuk Tabe, their leader declared their independence. They want the international community to intervene and press the government in Yaounde to order its troops out of Ambazonia.

The conflict in Cameroon’s English-speaking regions has killed more than 2,000 people, internally displaced more than 500,000 and caused more than 50,000 Cameroonians to seek refuge in Nigeria, according to the United Nations.