https://reliefweb.int/report/cameroon/cameroon-launches-emergency-fund-victims-separatist-conflict
"All Cameroonians have been called upon to contribute to the fund."
"All Cameroonians have been called upon to contribute to the fund."
June 21,
2018 1:56PM
Moki Edwin
Kindzeka
YAOUNDE —
Cameroon has launched a multi-million dollar emergency
humanitarian assistance plan for hundreds of thousands of its
citizens who the government says live in precarious and life-threatening
conditions in Cameroon and Nigeria due to the ongoing conflict with armed
separatists of Cameroon’s Anglophone regions seeking to break away from the
predominantly French-speaking country. All Cameroonians
have been called upon to contribute to the fund.
Cameroon
Prime Minister Philemon Yang says the $23
million fund was ordered by President Paul Biya after more than a hundred
Cameroonians, 84 soldiers and police have been killed, and hundreds of
thousands of the country’s citizens now live in precarious and life-threatening
conditions.
Yang says the
fighting has internally displaced 74,000 people who are facing famine along
with disastrous health conditions, and that 21,000 others have fled to
Nigeria and should be brought back home.
"Our
emergency humanitarian assistance plan aims at providing emergency
humanitarian assistance to affected people; ensuring the socio-economic
reintegration of the affected populations; reconstructing destroyed
infrastructure, housing, food and basic needs, health care, education. This action will include assistance and
visits to show compassion to Cameroonian refugees in Nigeria," Yang
said.
The prime
minister said people living outside of Cameroon instigate armed youths under
the influence of drugs to kill, kidnap and rape, adding that many teenagers
have been recruited as child soldiers. He said famine was looming in
English-speaking areas since most farms and cattle ranches had been
abandoned, and most businesses closed.
Yang said he
was counting on government resources and contributions from Cameroonians and
the international community to fund the emergency humanitarian assistance
plan.
Reactions
have been varied. Many people say it
is a good initiative to bring back thousands who have fled and reconstruct
their destroyed towns and villages.
But Father
Appolinarius Nkeng of the Catholic Church, who has been providing food aid to
displaced populations and is calling for an end to the violence, says the
government should first of all call for a cease-fire and initiate dialogue
with the armed separatists.
"The
option and the way out is proper and organized dialogue. But I think it cannot be done in the manner
politicians are talking about. You cannot have unity and peace without
justice."
Schools have
been closed in the English-speaking northwest and southwest areas of Cameroon
since November 2016 when lawyers and teachers called for a strike to stop
what they see as an overuse of the French language.
Separatists
took over, calling for the independence of the English-speaking from the
French speaking regions. Cameroon’s
government reacted with a crackdown and several dozen leaders of the strike
were arrested.
Last week,
human rights group Amnesty International criticized Cameroon’s government for
using what it said was unnecessary and excessive force that frequently placed
civilians in the web of violence and desperate conditions.
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