Tag: Cameroon

  • Amnesty accuses Cameroon of torturing suspects in fight against Boko Haram

    Amnesty accuses Cameroon of torturing suspects in fight against Boko Haram

    Amnesty International on Thursday accused Cameroonian forces of torturing suspects in their campaign against Islamist group Boko Haram.

    Amnesty’s report documented 101 cases of arbitrary arrest and torture by Cameroonian troops charged with fighting the insurgents between 2013 and 2017.

    The human rights watchdog, said that much of the torture happening at a base that has also been used by American and French troops.

    Amnesty said some of the victims were tortured to death.

    The Nigerian militant group has been fighting for the past eight years to create a medieval Islamic caliphate around Lake Chad, where Nigeria, Cameroon, Niger and Chad meet.

    According to aid agency figures, Boko Haram attacks have killed more than 20,000 people and displaced 2.7 million in the region.

    Atrocities such as the kidnapping of more than 200 school girls from the Nigerian village of Chibok in 2014 persuaded Western countries, especially the U.S. and France, to provide counter-insurgency assistance to some of the countries affected, including intelligence and training.

    The U.S. Africa Command said it had not received any reports of human rights abuses by Cameroonian forces at the base mentioned.

    French Defence Ministry officials did not immediately comment.

    A Cameroon defence ministry spokesman accused Amnesty of “bad faith” and of trying “to transform killers into victims”.

    The torture techniques, which Amnesty described as “chilling”, include a “stress position described as ‘the goat’: the detainee’s arms and legs are tied together behind his back and he is left on the ground and beaten.”

    “In a common suspension technique known as ‘the swing’, the victim’s arms and legs are again tied behind his back, before he is lifted and suspended on a bar fitted between two poles … and further beaten,” Amnesty said.

    Other torture documented included being tied standing up in stress positions for 24 hours, being subject to simulated drowning, being deprived of food, forced to drink urine, given electric shocks and burned.

    Victims included women, the disabled and the mentally ill, the report said.

    “Our army is professional and disciplined,” Cameroon’s army spokesman Col. Didier Badjeck said, reacting to questions from Reuters.

    “It has better things to do than to spend time justifying itself against people who have preconceived ideas.”

    Amnesty reported that eighty of the 101 cases of torture took place at the elite Rapid Intervention Battalion (BIR) headquarters at Salak, in Cameroon’s Far North region, the heart of the insurgency.

    Amnesty said its delegates had observed French troops at the base in May 2015.

    It also said it had still and video images “clearly showing the regular presence of U.S personnel in numerous locations across the base, including making use of a makeshift gym and a trailer converted into an office.

    It urged the U.S. and France to investigate whether their military personnel knew that torture was taking place on the site, and whether or not their assistance “has contributed to the commission of these crimes and violations.”

    “To date, U.S. Africa Command has not received any reports of human rights abuses by Cameroonian forces at either of these locations,” Robyn Mack, a spokeswoman at the U.S. military’s Africa Command, said in a statement.

    “Any foreign military unit that receives security assistance receives training on the law of armed conflict and human rights law.”

  • Badminton: 11 countries for 3rd Lagos Badminton Classics – Chairman

    Badminton: 11 countries for 3rd Lagos Badminton Classics – Chairman

    The Lagos State Badminton Association (LSBA) has said that 11 countries would feature in the 3rd Lagos International Badminton classics from July 26 to July 29 at the Teslim Balogun Stadium, Surulere.

    The association’s chairman, Francis Orbih, told a news conference on Thursday that the Gov. Akinwunmi ambode has also increased the tournament’s prize money to 20,000 dollars.

    With the increase, the competition becomes biggest ever to be staged in Lagos and in Africa.

    “A total of 20,000 dollars have been set aside as the total prize money for the entire competition.

    “The competition will also have Nigeria’s best players compete among quality international ranked players and get a chance to be ranked as well,’’ Orbih said.

    According to Orbih, the international athletes will Israel’s Misha Zilberman who is ranked 68 in the world.

    Others will come from Sri Lanka, Portugal, Republic of Benin, Egypt, Italy, Cameroon, Uganda, India and Ghana.

    He said that Nigeria’s Habib Temitope ranked number 512 in the world will lead the challenge by the national players.

    Meanwhile, Deji Tinubu, the Chairman, Lagos State Sports Commission, has extolled the brilliance and the dedication of the LBSA as one of the best associations working hard.

    Tinubu said the association would always get the backing of the sports commission to carry out their objectives because over the years, it had shown commitment in developing youths through badminton.

    “It is good to know that the classics are back and I want to agree that it is indeed back for good.

    “We at the sports commission are happy about how the LSBA has carried itself and the sport’s fans,’’ he said adding that the governor remained an ardent fan of the game.

    “This is why we have once again partnered this edition and also gone ahead to raise the prize money.

    “We hope at the end of the tournament that Nigerian youths can gain from the international players in the areas of mentoring and maintaining a good relationship,’’ Tinubu said.

    The winner of the Men and Women’s Singles will earn 2,000 dollars each, while the second place winners get 1,500 dollars and the second runners-up 650 dollars each.

    The doubles and mixed doubles winners will get 725 dollars each, while the runners-up and the second runners-up take 400 dollars and 175 dollars respectively.

    He noted that the prize monies would be given as directed by the International BVadminton Federation.

  • Reps to investigate alleged killing of 97 Nigerians by Cameroon’s gendarmes

    Reps to investigate alleged killing of 97 Nigerians by Cameroon’s gendarmes

    The House of Representatives, on Thursday resolved to investigate alleged killing of 97 Nigerians in the ceded Bakassi Peninsula by Cameroonian gendarmes.

    The resolution was sequel to a motion under “Matters of Urgent National Importance’’ by Rep. Babatunde Kolawole (Ondo-APC) on the need to investigate the report.

    Moving the motion, Kolawole said, “last week, there were several media reports that 97 Nigerians have been killed in Bakassi by Cameroonian gendarmes.

    “This is because they could not afford a N100, 000 levied on each fishing boat.

    “This is in spite of the clauses in the Green Tree Agreement signed between Nigerian and Cameroonian Governments which protect our citizens in the ceded areas from harm.

    “Apart from these recent attacks, there had been reports of harassments, rape and killings of Nigerians by the gendarmes over the years with the Nigerian government seemingly doing little or nothing to stop it.

    “If nothing is done to stop this ugly development, other Nigerian lives would be at risk as the gendarmes may continue to kill Nigerians at will without fear of recriminations.”

    Kolawole said that though there were reports that the Federal Government had summoned the Cameroonian Ambassador over the killings, there was need for the House, as the people’s parliament, to send a clear signal.

    “We will not sit and watch while the lives of our citizens are wasted with impunity.”

    Members spoke in favour of the motion, with some decrying the gendarmes’ perceived use of excessive force against Nigerian citizens in the ceded region.

    The motion was unanimously adopted by members when it was put to a voice vote by the Speaker, Mr Yakubu Dogara.

    The motion was therefore referred to the House Committee on Foreign Affairs for investigation.

  • Nigeria, Niger, Chad, Cameroon adopt plan to eradicate Boko Haram

    Nigeria, Niger, Chad, Cameroon adopt plan to eradicate Boko Haram

    The Council of Ministers of Defence of the Lake Chad Basin Commission (LCBC) and the Republic of Benin have adopted a new plan “to completely eradicate” the terror sect, Boko Haram, in the region.

    The draft document prepared by military experts, chiefs of defence staff and heads of intelligence and security services of the LCBC was validated in Yaounde on Thursday, though the content was not made public.

    However, Cameroon Defence Minister, Joseph Beti Assomo said the meeting brought them closer to their “common strategic objective; the complete eradication of Boko Haram.”

    The Yaounde meeting also focused on assessing the security and humanitarian situation of the region and preparing for post-conflict stabilisation and rehabilitation of the areas affected by the Boko Haram militants.

    Boko Haram launched its insurgency in 2009 aiming to create an Islamic state in north eastern Nigeria, but has spread its terror to countries of the Lake Chad Basin – Cameroon, Chad, Niger and Nigeria.

    An 8,700-man regional Multinational Joint Task Force (MNJTF) comprising troops from the four countries has been fighting to bring the sect to its knees since 2015.

    The executive secretary of the LCBC, Sanusi Imran Abdullahi said thanks to the efforts of the force, Boko Haram has been weakened.

    He announced that a new commander has been appointed to head the force.

     

  • FG summons Cameroonian ambassador over killing of Nigerians in Bakassi

    The Foreign Affairs Ministry has summoned Cameroon’s High Commissioner to Nigeria, Amb. Abbas Salahedine, to give explanations on the report of maltreatment and killings of Nigerians in the Bakassi Peninsula by Cameroonian Gendarmes

    A statement by the Ministry’s Acting Spokesperson, Mrs Jane Adams, expressed dismay on the incident said to have been occasioned by alleged non-payment of taxes on fishing activities.

    “The ministry has instructed the Nigerian Missions in Yaounde and Buea, to investigate the report with a view to confirming their veracity and inform Headquarters immediately.

    “The ministry appeals to the Cameroonian authorities to exercise their duty of care and protection over the people of Bakassi, including other Nigerian citizens in the area,” the statement said.

    A report on Friday had stated that no fewer than 97 Nigerians were killed as Cameroon Gendarmes allegedly attacked residents of Bakassi over failure to pay a N100,000 boat levy.

    The report stated that the attackers sacked mainly Nigerians from Akwa Ibom, Cross River and Ondo state.

    Many others were however said to have escaped at midnight with their fishing boats and arrived at Ikang in Bakassi and Ibaka in Akwa Ibom.

    The killing and sacking of Nigerians in former Bakassi is believed to be a violation of the 2005 Green Tree Agreement (GTA) by the Nigeria-Cameroon Mixed Commission.

    The Agreement stipulated that the Bakassi returnees must be properly resettled to their natural habitat so that they can have a meaningful living.

    The GTA also states that Nigerians who choose to remain in Cameroon can do so without any molestation. (NAN)

  • Boko Haram militants kill nine in Niger village

    Boko Haram militants kill nine in Niger village

    Suspected Boko Haram militants have killed nine people in south-east Niger, an official said on Monday.

    The militants arrived on foot in Nglewa village in Kablewa rural municipality some 100 kilometres north of Diffa on Sunday.

    Kablewa Mayor Abari Elh Daouda said that they killed eight young people and an elderly man.

    About 30 people, including women and young men, were abducted.

    Report says the radical Islamist group kidnaps women to use as servants and sex slaves, while they use men as fighters.

    The Nigeria-based group has killed no fewer than 20,000 people since 2009 in Nigeria, Chad, Cameroon and Niger.

  • UNHCR cautions against involuntary return of Nigerian refugees

    UNHCR cautions against involuntary return of Nigerian refugees

    The Office of the UN Human Rights Commissioner for Refugees (UNHCR) has cautioned against the forceful return of Nigerian refugees from Cameroon.

    The UN Refugee Agency gave the caution in a statement on Thursday following the return of 887 Nigerian refugees on Tuesday.

    “The refugees were rounded up at 19:30 (7:30 p.m) local time and forcibly removed to Banki in Nigeria in desperate conditions.”

    The agency said that the refugees were repatriated in six trucks provided by the Nigerian military and Cameroonian police from the Kolofata border site adding that most of them were children.

    It added that it was alarmed over the forced returns of refugees from Cameroon into northeast Nigeria and recalled that similar incidents had occurred earlier in the year.

    It further stated that repeated warnings had been made concerning the situation in which conditions did not yet exist to make returns safe and sustainable.

    The UN High Commissioner for Refugees, Filippo Grandi said: “The involuntary return of refugees must be avoided under any circumstances.

    “In addition, returns to Nigeria put a strain on the few existing services and are not sustainable at this time.

    “A new emergency, just as the rainy season is starting, has to be avoided at all costs.”

    The high commissioner for refugees said the agency remained concerned for the children.

    “We also understand that several dozen refugees, fearing that they would be returned against their will, escaped and went into hiding.”

    The UNHCR reiterated that insecurity in the northeast prevented refugees from returning to their places of origin with many of them ending up in Banki where more than 45,000 internally displaced persons were barely accommodated.

    It also repeated its appeal to the authorities in Cameroon to allow newly arrived Nigerian refugees to reach Minawao camp, where about 58,000 refugees are currently being hosted, with another 33,000 living in nearby villages.

    The agency further renewed its call on Cameroon and Nigeria to refrain from further forced returns.

    It also urged both parties to take urgent steps to convene a meeting of the Tripartite Commission, established under a recent agreement with UNHCR to ensure a facilitated voluntary return process in line with international standards.

    The UN agency also emphasised the importance of all states to ensure international protection for all those fleeing insecurity and persecution in the northeast.

  • Cameroon repatriates 887 Nigerian refugees

    About 887 Nigerian refugees arrived at Banki, Borno State, on Tuesady, following a request by the Cameroonian government to Nigeria, to allow it repatriate them.

    The External Relations Officer, United Nations High Commission for Refugees (UNHCR) Nigeria, Mr. Hanson Tamfu, stated this in a statement yesterday.

    Tamfu said the request was prompted by fear and suspicions by Cameroon, that some of the refugees might by Boko Haram insurgents.

    The statement reads: “The returnees arrived in six trucks sent by Nigeria, following a meeting with the governor of the far north region of Cameroon on June 19.

    “At the meeting, Nigeria was requested to cause the return of the refugees, which the Cameroonian authority suspects may also comprise some elements of Boko Haram.

    “Consequently, the Borno State Emergency Management Agency (SEMA), on June 26, dispatched the buses to transport the refugees.”

    He added that the latest group of returnees comprise 233 females, 187 males, 236 girls, and 231 boys, who were living in host communities in Kolofata, a far north region of Cameroon.

    According to him, it was reported that most of them do not have much in terms of personal effects, but a few items in plastic sacks, while some returned completely empty.

    Tamfu said more refugees had shown interest in leaving Minawowa Camp in Cameroon, adding that they were anxious to return following reports of improved security back home.

    The News Agency of Nigeria (NAN) reports that the official registered returnees from Cameroon through Banki now stands at 19,257.

     

    UN chief restates support for Fed Govt 

    The Secretary-General of the United Nations (UN), Mr António Guterres, has reiterated the organisation’s support to the Federal Government in the fight against terrorism and violent extremism.

    Guterres, in a statement by his spokesman, Stéphane Dujarric, condemned Monday’s suicide attacks on Maiduguri.

    The statement reads: “The Secretary-General reiterates the United Nations’ support to the Government of Nigeria in its fight against terrorism and violent extremism. He extends his condolences to the people and Government of Nigeria for the loss of lives.

    “He also wishes a quick recovery to the injured and hopes those responsible for the dastardly act will be brought to justice.”

  • World Cup Qualifiers: Cameroon should not be written off, Owolabi cautions

    World Cup Qualifiers: Cameroon should not be written off, Owolabi cautions

    Former Green Eagles wing forward Felix Owolabi on Wednesday in Lagos warned that the Indomitable Lions of Cameroon should not be written off.

    Owolabi told the News Agency of Nigeria (NAN) there should be no room for complacency in spite of Cameroon’s poor outing at the ongoing FIFA Confederations Cup competition in Russia.

    He warned that the Super Eagles would likely meet a more determined opponent in Cameroon during the 2018 World Cup qualifier in Uyo in August.

    “The competition has served as a kind of training for the African champions, even though they didn’t go far in the tournament, but they were resilient.

    “In all of their matches, you can see they weren’t going to back down. It was always a do-or-die situation. They played like it was going to be their last match.

    “Not going far wasn’t good for their reputation, but they still have that never-say-die spirit. That’s the number one thing any good team needs.

    “Their current form shouldn’t be a threat to us if truly we have gone back to the drawing board like the team’s technical crew promised after the last outing against Bafana Bafana of South Africa,’’ Owolabi said.

    NAN reports that the Central African side played a 1-1 draw with Australia, and lost to Chile and Germany to crash out of the tournament.

    Owolabi, whose Green Eagles squad won the 1980 edition of the African Cup of Nations, said the Super Eagles must be thoroughly prepared for the Indomitable Lions.

    “I’m sure the handlers of Super Eagles are paying attention, and I hope they learnt from our last match against South Africa.

    “Experience can never be bought. A good team that will stand the test of time is a blend of young and old. Experience is everything, we shouldn’t ignore that.

    “As for the method of elimination by substitution, it should be a gradual thing. You just don’t change the composition of the team overnight,’’ he said.

  • 5m children susceptible to water-borne diseases in Lake Chad  – UNICEF

    5m children susceptible to water-borne diseases in Lake Chad – UNICEF

    The UN warned on Friday that no fewer than 5.6 million children across the Lake Chad basin are susceptible to deadly water-borne diseases such as cholera and hepatitis E as the rainy season hits a region already reeling from Boko Haram’s insurgency.

    UNICEF in a statement, said the 5.6 million children in Cameroon, Chad, Niger and Nigeria, many of whom have been uprooted by violence and live in host communities or refugee camps, are facing the disease threat as the rains arrive.

    The aid agency said flooding and muddy roads are expected to limit aid access to remote areas, where hunger is growing and the food is lacking, while the insecurity has made it hard to deliver supplies and ensure clean water is available ahead of the rains.

    “The rains will further complicate what is already a dire humanitarian situation, as millions of children made vulnerable by conflict are now facing the potential spread of opportunistic diseases,” Marie Poirier of UNICEF said in a statement.

    “Unsafe water, inadequate sanitation and poor hygiene conditions can lead to cholera and hepatitis E.

    “Staving off disease is our top priority.”

    Cholera, which spreads through contaminated food and water, causes diarrhoea and vomiting, leaving small children especially vulnerable to death from dehydration, whereas liver disease Hepatitis E is particularly deadly for pregnant women.

    Also, the Medecins Sans Frontieres (MSF), said in Niger’s Diffa region, which has been hit by the conflict and hosts about 250,000 uprooted Nigeriens and Nigerian refugees, an outbreak of hepatitis E has killed at least 33 pregnant women so far this year.

    “To curb this type of outbreak, we know that our best asset at the moment is … water and sanitation activities ” said Víctor Illanes of the MSF.

    “When the deficiencies are so high and the space to be covered is as large as Diffa, it is difficult for these activities to have an impact in the short term,” he added.

    Boko Haram’s campaign to create an Islamic state is in its eighth year with little sign of ending.

    It has claimed more than 20,000 lives and uprooted 2.7 million people across Lake Chad.

    No fewer than five million people in northeast Nigeria need food aid, and about 1.5 million are believed to be on the brink of famine, yet the UN in this June, had to cut emergency food supplies for 400,000 people due to a lack of funding.