Tag: Cameroon

  • Doctors’ strike in Cameroon leaves patients without care

    Doctors’ strike in Cameroon leaves patients without care

    A doctors’ strike in Cameroon left patients without critical care in the capital Yaoude, the latest in a string of union actions that have crippled a country in the midst of political crisis.

    The doctors union, known as SYMEC, demanded better working conditions and pay and left nurses to attend to sick

    patients in some of Yaounde’s major hospitals.

    The strike was not directly linked to other union action, but it adds to the turmoil in the central African

    country where protests have erupted since October in the Anglophone south, and northwest regions.

    Teachers and lawyers have been on strike for months to protest at what they say is their marginalisation by the

    French-speaking majority under President Paul Biya’s 35-year rule.

    In reaction, the government has shut down the internet in English-speaking areas.
    At Yaounde’s Central Hospital. a Reuters witness said, patients angrily waited to be seen, clutching prescriptions and test results, but there were no doctors in sight.

    “My father had a motorcycle accident and must undergo surgery today.

    “`There are no surgeons, we are told that there is a strike, and the nurse told us that they only deal with the sick in-house or by appointment,” said Marianne Balla, who was waiting in the Central Hospital.

    The government said the strike was illegal as SYMEC is not a legally recognised union, a charge the union dismissed as untrue.

    It was not clear how well observed the strike was in other parts of the country.

    Some hospitals contacted by Reuters outside the capital said by telephone that they were operating normally.

    The strike comes at a critical time for Biya, who is under pressure to peacefully resolve a growing crisis.

    No fewer than six protesters have been shot dead and hundreds others arrested during the rare challenge to state authority ahead of a presidential election in 2018.

    In an apparent bid to stamp out online critics, the government has cut internet access in the two English-speaking regions for three months, hobbling business activity and prompting criticism from human rights groups and the UN.

    Still, with Biya looking to extend his long rule next year, some expect government crackdowns to continue.

    “With elections coming up in 2018, we can expect the situation to get much worse before it gets better,” said Jeffrey Smith from campaign group Vanguard Africa.

     

  • 489 arrested for street begging in Kano

    The Kano State Hisbah Board said it had arrested 489 beggars in February and March for allegedly violating the law banning street begging in the state.

    Malam Musa Tsangaya, Head of the Anti-begging Unit of the board, told the News Agency of Nigeria (NAN) in Kano that 192 of those arrested were children while 228 were adults.

    “Our men arrested the street beggars around France Road, Dangi Junction, Lugard Road, Murtala Mohammed Way and Magwan Junction violating the law banning street begging in Kano metropolis.

    “Out of the 489 beggars, 314 were adults, both male and female, while 175 were children who engaged in begging by the road side and in the premises of major businesses,” Tsangaya said.

    He stated that 300 of the arrested beggars hailed from Kano city, while 237 were from Jigawa, Katsina and Kaduna.

    According to him, the remaining nine are from Cameroon and Niger Republic.

    Tsangaya said some of them had been charged to court, while four of them suffer mental disorder.

  • Insurgency: Borno to evacuate 78,000 IDPs from Cameroon

    Insurgency: Borno to evacuate 78,000 IDPs from Cameroon

    The Borno Government said on Sunday that it plans to evacuate 78,000 Internally Displaced Persons (IDPs) back home from Cameroon.

    The News Agency of Nigeria [NAN] reports that the affected IDPs fled to Cameroon at the peak of the Boko Haram insurgency in the state.

    The IDPs had a week ago urged the state government to facilitate their return home or they will trek back to Nigeria.

    Ahmad Satome, Chairman of the State Emergency Management Agency (SEMA) told newsmen in Maiduguri that government plans to shelter the returnees in four temporary satellite camps.

    “The issue of the 78,000 Nigerian IDPs is purely a repatriation process, it is just to get them across the Cameroonian border back home.

    “Once they are back we will get them transported to transit camps in Kumshe, Gulumba, Ngoshe and Kirawa where they will feed for a week or thereabout, so they can stabilize before asking them where they want to go,” he said.

    Satome said that IDPs without any place to go would be kept in the camps while those who wanted to return home would be transported home.

    ” IDPs without homes or those whose communities are unsafe will be kept in the camps while those who want to return home will be transported home.

    “But for those who wished to remain in Cameroon they will be allowed to stay in accordance with the Geneva Convention,” he said.

    Satome said government was focused on ensuring early return of all IDPs back to their communities especially those in areas liberated by the military.

    “It is true that government is resolute in ensuring all IDPs return home in a dignified manner in accordance to the Kampala convention.

    “But sometimes a lots of uncertainties come in,” he said.

    Satome said that the continued rescue of persons by the military from terrorists enclaves had created new IDPs requiring attention.

    “The intensed pressure by the military on Boko Haram enclaves have led to rescue of new IDPs requiring care.

    “This means that they have to be kept in camps for care and other humanitarian services,” he said.

    Satome said however that government was resolute in moving IDPs who were interested in going back to camps close to their homes.

    ” I think it is unwise to keep 2,000 IDPs from Ngala in Maiduguri when you have about 200,000 others in Ngala town.

    “I think that the best thing is to move those willing to camps in their respective areas from where they can gradually move home,” he said. (NAN)

  • West African entrepreneurs collaborate to enhance trade, create jobs

    Young entrepreneurs from Cameroon, Ghana, Nigeria, and Sierra Leone have come together to form a new network aimed at addressing challenges to sub-regional trade and youth unemployment in West Africa.

    The group, the Commonwealth Alliance of Young Entrepreneurs – West Africa (CAYE-WA) was inaugurated on Wednesday in Accra, Ghana, according to a statement from Mr Will Henley, the media contact at the Commonwealth Secretariat.

    The network aims to support youth business leaders to expand cross-border trading opportunities.It would also provide a platform for recommendations to policy-makers to improve access to capital and markets, overcome barriers for business and enhance entrepreneurship education.

    The event, which launched the group, was hosted by the Ghanaian Governmen

    Mr Isaac Asiamah, Ghana’s Minister for Youth and Sports noted that its launch was “most welcome at this time when most African governments are seeking innovative ways of solving the youth unemployment crisis’’.

    Asiamah said that the group would develop the skills, creativity, innovation, knowledge and confidence of young entrepreneurs.

    According to him, it will also enhance the social, political and economic integration of youth in the sub-region through peer to peer learning and networking.

    “The Commonwealth Alliance of Young Entrepreneurs, West Africa has come at an opportune time to help the youth develop their capacities and support them to contribute to the sustainable development of their respective countries,” he said.

    The Director of Youth at the Commonwealth Secretariat, Katherine Ellis commended the establishment of CAYE-WA, recognising that it would help drive trade and give young entrepreneurs a stronger voice with policy-makers.

    “This initiative will help position entrepreneurship as a credible career choice, and ensure that young entrepreneurs have the access and tools to be successful, create jobs, and contribute to development and economic growth,” Ellis said.

    She further said the initiative was directly aligned with the Sustainable Development Goals (SDGs).

    “This includes SDG Goal 8, aimed at achieving sustained and inclusive employment and economic growth.

    “It will also contribute toward SDG 16 which is focused on promoting peaceful societies for sustainable development.

    “Going forward, we plan to connect the young entrepreneurs with their colleagues around the Commonwealth.

    “This is so that we can foster and increase trade between all our countries,” she added.

    Mr Bernard Takyi from Entrepreneurs Club in Ghana, who was elected as the inaugural Regional Coordinator of CAYE-WA, noted that entrepreneurship was a sustainable way to eradicate poverty.

    Takyi added that part of the aims of CAYE-WA was to partner with government and other strategic partners to advance youth entrepreneurship in West Africa.

    “I hope that one day, I will be able to travel to Nigeria, Cameroon and Sierra Leone, or any other country in the Commonwealth of Nations, and meet young entrepreneurs who are members of CAYE.”

    Emmanuel Sin-nyet Asigri, Chief Executive of Ghana National Youth Authority noted that youth development was key to nation building.

    “Without young people’s ideas and skills, we would be missing the best hope for our current development and the future.”

    He also urged the young entrepreneurs to use the SDGs as a platform to “generate more innovation and creativity”.

    Representatives from government, the private sector and Civil Society Organisations were on hand to endorse the creation of CAYE-WA.

    CAYE-WA was modeled on existing Commonwealth networks in Asia, the Caribbean, and East and Southern Africa, which were all founded with support from the Commonwealth Secretariat.

    As early actions, CAYE-WA plans to launch a speaker series across all member nations and provide role models and mentoring to young entrepreneurs.

    It would also facilitate bilateral and multilateral trade missions by young entrepreneurs to open markets and develop a joint policy statement and recommendations for engagement with governments regarding entrepreneurship policy.

    It will further build the number of organisations and networks of young entrepreneurs which are members of CAYE-WA as well as create a Pan-African Young Entrepreneurs Summit.

  • Boko Haram: 2,600 Nigerian refugees forced to return from Cameroun

    The UN has expressed concern over the forced return of Nigerian refugees from Cameroon in spite of recent tripartite agreement aimed at ensuring voluntary returns of nationals.
    According to a statement from the Office of the UN High Commissioner for Refugees (UNHCR) on Tuesday, Cameroon has forcefully returned more than 2,600 refugees back to Nigerian border villages “against their will”.
    UNHCR Spokesperson, Babar Balogh, said in the statement that the organisation was particularly concerned “as these forced returns have continued unabated”.
    Balogh recalled that the governments of Nigeria and Cameroon signed a tripartite agreement with UNHCR in Yaoundé on March 2, 2017.
    He said that the forced return of asylum-seekers and refugees was a “serious violation” of the 1951 Refugee Convention and the 1969 OAU Convention, which he said, Cameroon had ratified.
    He, however, commended Cameroon for its generosity in hosting more than 85,000 Nigerian refugees but urged it to honour its obligations under international and regional refugee protection instruments.
    The spokesman said that refugees had fled violent attacks from Boko Haram and urged that “their access to asylum and protection must be ensured”.
    “Insecurity persists in parts of north-eastern Nigeria and access to basic services remains limited.
    “Most returning refugees find themselves in situations of internal displacement upon return and are unable to return to their places of origin,” he stated.
    He also said that UNHCR recognised the legitimate national security concerns of the Cameroon Government. (NAN)

  • AHEAD OF NIGERIA SHOWDOWN: Cameroon to meet Tunisia March 24

    AHEAD OF NIGERIA SHOWDOWN: Cameroon to meet Tunisia March 24

    •Game holds in Monastir

    Newly-crowned African champions Cameroon have lined up a friendly with the Tunisian national team, Eagles of Carthage, in March ahead of their World Cup qualifier against Nigeria.

    The friendly between the two African powerhouses will take place at the Mustapha Ben Jannet stadium in Monastir on March 24.

    The Tunisian Football Federation announced on their official webpage : “Agreement has just been reached between the Tunisian Football Federation and the Cameroonian Federation for the organisation of an international friendly match on  March 24 at the Mustapha Ben Jannet stadium in Monastir.”

    Before the Indomitable Lions face off against the Super Eagles in August, they will represent Africa at this summer’s FIFA Confederations Cup.

    Nigeria have confirmed a friendly with Senegal during the next international window.

  • Kano arrests 966 for street begging

    Kano arrests 966 for street begging

    The Kano State Hisbah Board, on Thursday said it had arrested 966 beggars in January for allegedly violating the law banning street begging on major streets of the state capital.

    According to Malam Musa Tsangaya, the officer in charge of the Anti-begging Unit of the board, 203 of those arrested were children while 755 were adults.

    “Our men arrested 966 street beggars around Bank Road, Civic Centre, Dangi Junction, Luggard Road and Magwan Junction violating the law banning street begging in Kano metropolis.

    “Out of the 966 beggars, 755 were adults, both male and female, while 203 were children who engaged in begging in by the road sides and in the premises of major businesses,” Tsangaya said.

    He stated that 390 of the arrested beggars hailed from Kano city, while 576 were from Jigawa, Katsina and Kebbi.

    According to him, the remaining three are from Cameroon and Niger Republic.

  • Aftermath of 2017 AFCON: Cameroon to pocket US$4 million

    Winners at the just concluded 2017 Africa Cup of Nations(AFCON) held in Gabon are smiling home as  the  Confederation of Africa Football(CAF)   had reviewed the prize money for the competition.

    Champions of the tournament, the Indomitable Lions of Cameroon will cart home the cash prize  US$ 4 million,  which originally was  US$ 1.5 million, .However, Egypt pockets  US$ 2 million for being runners up.

    It was gathered that CAF was able to  increase the prize monies after a sponsor  French
    petroleum group Totalcame on board. The oil giant signed an eight-year contract for an estimated amount of a little over one billion dollars (EUR 915 million).

    Meanwhile, Ghana carted home  US$ 1.5 million for placing fourth at the biggest Africa football tourney.

    However, a total of nearly 16.5 million Dollars will be distributed among the 16 countries that started the tournament on 14 January.

  • World Cup qualifiers: We are now in better position to beat Cameroon – Eguavoen

    World Cup qualifiers: We are now in better position to beat Cameroon – Eguavoen

     

    Former Super Eagles Coach Austin Eguavoen, has  said that the Eagles are now in a better position to beat the Indomitable Lions of Cameroon, the current African champions, in their World Cup qualifiers in August.

    Like Eguavoen, another ex-player of the Super Eagles, Edema Fuludu, shared similar opinion, when they spoke in separate interviews with the News Agency of Nigeria (NAN) in Benin on Monday.

    The Indomitable Lions of Cameroon on Sunday defeated the Pharaohs of Egypt 2-1 to record its fifth AFCON title, after triumphs in 1984, 1988, 2000 and 2002.

    The victory, however, seemed to pose a nightmare to soccer fans as the Eagles would confront the Lions in a double-header, for Russia 2018 qualifiers in August.

    Currently Nigeria is leading Cameroon with four points.

    Both ex-internationals said the Lions, being the African champions, would make the Nigeria national team to be better prepared for the August clash.

    Eguavoen said he remained upbeat about Eagles chances in the August clash in spite of Cameroon’s emergence as African champion, adding that Nigerians have nothing to worry about.

    He, however, said that he was not surprised at the victory of the Indomitable Lions that lifted the AFCON trophy in Gabon.

    “The victory will give them serious boost no doubt, but it will also make our players not to relax, but be better prepared for the August match.

    “Cameroon will be coming here with all their arsenals, including those who didn’t participate in Gabon, but we have a good team with a blend of young and experienced players that will beat the African champion.

    “The worst case scenario is for us to beat them here and get an away draw, ” Eguavoen said.

    On his part, Fuludu, who said no doubt that the Lions are a good team, stressed that the Eagles were capable of getting a good result from them.

    According to him, “It would have been better that the match is played next month as Cameroon will still be basking in the euphoria of the AFCON victory to take us for granted.

    “But this notwithstanding, we still have time to prepare and we will be better prepared now that our opponent are champions of Africa.

    “We have the players and experienced coaching crew to get a better result from the matches; both home and away with Cameroon.’’

    NAN reports that the Super Eagles top the group with six points, followed by Cameroon with two points from two matches.

  • 2017 AFCON: Cameroon reaches final

    .Beats Ghana 2-0
    Cameroon has thrashed Ghana 2-0 to advance to the finals of the 2017 Afican Cup of Nations holding in Gabon.

    A finely-poised tie remained goalless until the 72nd minute, when Ghana goalkeeper Razak Brimah failed to deal with a free-kick into his area and John Boye’s weak defensive header merely served as an assist for Ngadeu to control and fire home.

    Bassogog then broke away to clinch the win and spark wild celebrations as Hugo Broos’s side progress to a final against Egypt in Libreville on Sunday.
    The Indomitable Lions’ victory will now meet Egypt in the finals.They had their last Nations final with the Egyptians in 2008 after they lost 1-0 to the Pharaohs.

    Meanwhile, Ghana goes  for a third-place play-off against Burkina Faso on Saturday.